The Guardian (USA)

Belgrade: the city where dirty air is seen as a ‘consequenc­e of economic growth’

- Ajit Niranjan in Belgrade

When the Yugoslav prime minister Džemal Bijedić promised to clean the country’s air at a conference in Belgrade in 1974, a reporter from the New York Times wrote that there was little hope of early relief for the city’s residents, who felt the pollution was getting worse. “The choking, sulphurous atmosphere of Belgrade and several other major Yugoslav cities reddens eyes, shreds nylon stockings and ruins pianissimo passages in the concert hall because of the nearly continuous coughing it causes in audiences,” the writer said.

Half a century later, residents of Belgrade are still holding their breath. “I have asthma and it’s killing me,” says Dejan, 40, a graffiti artist and MC who runs a paint shop in the industrial Palilula district. “It’s not smog, man, it’s a black fog. You cannot see.”

The air in the capital of Serbia, a country of 7 million people in line to join the EU, is worse than in almost any other city in Europe. Belgrade is home to five of the 15 most polluted districts on the continent, Guardian analysis of modelling based on European air quality data has revealed. Foul coal plants, vast landfills, old vehicles and bad heaters spew a cocktail of toxic particles that land in the lungs and veins of the city’s residents.

Bubbling anger has at times boiled over into protests, but little has been done to make the air safe. Last month, in one of its first attempts to protect children from toxic fumes, the city put out a tender for 11,500 air purifiers to go in its schools and kindergart­ens.

In doing so, “the city is admitting they cannot solve the problem”, says Milica Jablanović, a councillor with an opposition green party and a researcher at the Institute for Educationa­l Research. “I sometimes have the feeling I am doing damage to my own children because I live here.”

In the summer, the air in Belgrade tastes only a little worse than that in London or Berlin. But come winter, when people burn more fuel and layers of warm urban air trap toxins near the ground, the city is smothered by blankets of smog that winds are too weak to throw off.

“You don’t have enough air and there’s an oily smell,” says Jelena Cvetić, 48, a pharmacist in central Belgrade. “People with asthma and cardiovasc­ular problems usually have big problems on those days.”

A study funded by the Serbian science ministry this year looked at pollution data for summer months and estimated that fine particulat­es were responsibl­e for one in five strokes, one in four cases of ischemic heart disease and one in 11 cases of lung cancer. It called on the city council to tell citizens when the air is bad and ask them to stay indoors.

“Effective measures that curb air pollution need to be improved as soon as possible,” the researcher­s said.

The city council’s secretaria­t for environmen­tal protection said its air pollution data was the most relevant for Belgrade. It said the city had taken a series of measures to cut air pollution and that its data showed no increase in the average annual concentrat­ion of PM10 particulat­es or the number of days exceeding the limit value. “These efforts had resulted in positive effects,” it said.

Like many capitals of the republics that made up Yugoslavia, Belgrade is powered by ageing power plants that burn lignite, a particular­ly dirty type of coal. In 2016, the 16 coal plants in the western Balkans emitted more sulphur dioxide than the EU’s fleet of 250 plants, according to a report from the nonprofit Health and Environmen­t Alliance.

The worst pollution in Belgrade is found in Obrenovac, a municipali­ty 25km (15 miles) from the centre that houses the bulk of the Nikola Tesla coal plant complex. In 2019, its air contained levels of fine particulat­es known as PM2.5 that were five times above the limits set by World Health Organizati­on, the Guardian analysis found.

Adding to the problem are leaky homes with old stoves that burn dirty fuels. Most buildings in Serbia were built more than 50 years ago, often with poor insulation, while more than 60% of the country’s space heating is provided by burning wood and coal. The result, in winter, is the choice between staying at home or breathing air that kills.

“Before I leave my bed, I check my air pollution app,” says Aleksandra Tomanić, the head of the nonprofit European Fund for the Balkans, which has run campaigns to tackle the region’s dirty air. If the warning level is orange, she opens a window. If it is red or purple, she waits – sometimes for the whole day.

“You literally feel it physically,” says Tomanić. “And when you feel it in your throat, you can imagine the state of your lungs.”

The city has made progress in some areas. Over the last decades, Belgrade has expanded its district heating network, which mostly runs on fossil gas, and ripped out more than 1,000 boilers. It has also stopped burning coal in some big public buildings.

Improvemen­ts are happening but it is not enough, says Elizabet Paunović, a retired doctor who used to lead the WHO’s European Centre for Environmen­t and Health. “Yes, we have good examples, but these are examples – it has to really become the practice.”

People and politician­s forget that the air in Belgrade is not just a threat in the winter, she says. It is only when pollution peaks “that the politician­s are upset. But they should be upset 24 hours a day, 365 days a week.”

From a bridge over the Danube one afternoon in August, a year-round cause of Belgrade’s bad air can be seen and smelled in the rush-hour traffic jam. Ageing buses idle their engines next to lines of cars, some of which would fail emissions tests in the EU. Dotted among the older vehicles are modern but bulky SUVs that burn large

 ?? Darko Vojinović/AP ?? People attend a protest calling for cleaner air in Belgrade last November. Photograph:
Darko Vojinović/AP People attend a protest calling for cleaner air in Belgrade last November. Photograph:
 ?? ?? Clouds are seen above downtown Belgrade. Composite: Guardian Design/Reuters
Clouds are seen above downtown Belgrade. Composite: Guardian Design/Reuters

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