The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Bangladesh, Pakistan, India world’s three smoggiest countries in 2023

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SINGAPORE (Reuters) Pakistan remained one of the world’s three smoggiest countries in 2023, as Bangladesh and India replaced Chad and Iran, with particulat­e matter about 15 times the level recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on, data published on Tuesday showed.

Average concentrat­ions of PM2.5 - small airborne particles that damage the lungs reached 79.9 micrograms per cubic metre in Bangladesh in 2023, and 73.7 micrograms in

Pakistan. The WHO recommends no more than 5 micrograms.

“Because of the climate conditions and the geography (in South Asia), you get this streak of PM2.5 concentrat­ions that just skyrocket because the pollution has nowhere to go,” said Christi Chester Schroeder, air quality science manager at IQAIR, a Swiss air-monitoring organisati­on.

“On top of that are factors such as agricultur­al practices, industry and population density,” she added. “Unfortunat­ely, it really does look like it will get worse before it gets better.”

In 2022, Bangladesh was ranked as having the fifthworst air quality, and India was eighth.

About 20% of premature deaths in Bangladesh are attributed to air pollution, and related health-care costs amount to 4%-5% of the country’s GDP, said Md Firoz Khan, an air pollution expert at Dhaka’s North South University.

Indian pollution also increased last year, with PM2.5 levels about 11 times higher than the WHO standard. India’s New Delhi was the worst-performing capital city, at 92.7 micrograms.

China also saw PM2.5 rise 6.3% to 32.5 micrograms last year, after five consecutiv­e annual declines.

Only Australia, Estonia, Finland, Grenada, Iceland, Mauritius and New Zealand met WHO standards in 2023.

The IQAIR report was based on data from more than 30,000 monitoring stations in 134 countries and regions.

Chad, the world’s most polluted country in 2022, was excluded from the 2023 listings because of data issues. Iran and Sudan were also taken off the 2023 list.

Christa Hasenkopf, director of the Air Quality Life Index at the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute, said 39% of countries have no public air quality monitoring.

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