Global Times

Pollution linked to 10% of cancer cases in Europe: report

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Pollution is linked to more than 10 percent of cancer cases in Europe, a report by the European Environmen­t Agency said Tuesday.

Most of these cases are preventabl­e, it said. “Exposure to air pollution, carcinogen­ic chemicals, radon, UV [ ultraviole­t] radiation and second- hand smoke together may contribute over 10 percent of the cancer burden in Europe,” the agency said in a statement.

But EEA expert Gerardo Sanchez said “all environmen­tal and occupation­al cancer risks can be reduced.”

“Environmen­tally determined cancers due to radiation or chemical carcinogen­s can be reduced to an almost negligible level,” he told journalist­s last week before the release of the report, the agency’s first on the link between cancer and the environmen­t.

In the European Union, 2.7 million people are diagnosed with cancer each year and 1.3 million die from it.

The continent, which accounts for less than 10 percent of the world’s population, reports almost a quarter of new cases and a fifth of deaths.

Air pollution is linked to around 1 percent of all cancer cases in Europe, and causes around 2 percent of all cancer deaths, the agency said.

Indoor exposure to radon is linked to up to 2 percent of all cancer cases, and one in 10 lung cancer cases in Europe.

Natural UV radiation may be responsibl­e for up to 4 percent of all cancer cases in Europe, the agency said.

Exposure to second- hand smoke may increase the overall risk for all cancers by up to 16 percent for people who have never been smokers, it added.

The agency warned that some chemicals used in European workplaces contribute to causing cancer, including lead, arsenic, chromium, cadmium, acrylamide, and pesticides.

Asbestos, a well- known carcinogen, is estimated to account for 55 to 88 percent of occupation­al lung cancers.

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