Western Mail

Children exposed to pollution on ‘toxic’ school run

- EMIL BEAMENT newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

CHILDREN are most exposed to dangerous air pollution on the school run and while they are out in the playground, experts have warned.

While youngsters only spend 40% of their time on the school run and at school, they receive 60% of their exposure to tiny particles of black carbon during those times, a study has found.

Peaks in children’s exposure to the pollution were recorded while they travelling to and from school and during break-time when they were likely to be in the playground, the report by Unicef UK and Queen Mary University of London showed.

Exposure to the pollutant, which can penetrate deep in the lungs, bloodstrea­m and potentiall­y the brain, and can stunt lung and brain growth and cause long-term breathing conditions, is generally higher at school than when children are at home.

Six children in London carried personal monitors which recorded black carbon over a 24-hour period during weekdays to assess their exposure on an average school day.

They spent an average of 7% of the day travelling, but experience­d 15% of their daily exposure to black carbon while on their journeys.

And while they spent 32% of the day at school, they got 44% of their exposure to the pollution during that time.

The assessment is part of a wide, unpublishe­d study by Queen Mary researcher­s.

Unicef UK estimates that one in three children, some 4.5 million youngsters, are growing up in towns and cities in the UK with unsafe levels of particulat­e pollution.

The charity warns that children breathe faster than adults, taking in more polluted air relative to their body weight.

And they tend to be exposed to higher doses, because they spend more time outside and walk or are pushed in buggies at the height of vehicle emissions.

Taking a child to school in a car does not protect them from the pollution, however, as they may be exposed higher levels of pollutants inside vehicles, because emissions circulate and build up rather than dissipate.

Uncief UK is calling on the Government to set up a ringfenced funding pot to protect children from air pollution, including on their daily school run and at school and nursery, and set out a UK-wide strategy on children and air pollution.

Amy Gibbs, Unicef UK’s director of advocacy, said: “We cannot afford to continue to overlook this invisible but serious threat; change is possible if the Government acts now.

“It is critical that it sets out a clear strategy with sufficient funding to protect children from the harmful effects of toxic air, when and where they are proven to be most at risk.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom