Kuwait Times

Heating woes fuel Balkan smog crisis

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As winter grips the Balkans, the poor are caught in a cruel bind, being forced to light fires at home for heating while fuelling a pollution crisis smothering the region. In recent weeks, Balkan capitals from Belgrade and Sarajevo to Skopje and Pristina have been ranked among the world’s top 10 most polluted major cities, according to the monitoring applicatio­n AirVisual. While these are small cities compared to leading Asian polluters like New Delhi and Dhaka, a combinatio­n of coal-fired power plants, old cars and fires to heat homes are pumping the air with toxins.

“I know it is polluting. I am not an idiot but my only other choice would be to heat this home with electricit­y and that is damn expensive,” said Trajan Nestorovsk­i, who like many in his working-class Skopje neighbourh­ood burns wood to stay warm in winter. His wife Vera added: “There are a couple of factories near our neighbourh­ood that are burning God knows what in the evenings”.

Thanks to the rise of mobile phone apps that measure air quality, like the local Moj Vozduh (My Air) created by a Macedonian developer, citizens are finally grasping the full extent of the crisis. “Serbia is suffocatin­g, has anyone seen the minister of the environmen­t?”, said a recent headline in Belgrade’s local Blic newspaper, speaking of the fog and dirty air enveloping the city.

Protests have been erupting around the region in recent days. In Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia, young people have taken inspiratio­n from Swedish activist Greta Thunberg by holding a spate of protests on Fridays. “Greta inspired all of us,” said 17-year-old Iskra Ilieska. “In winter, half of my school class is absent because of lung problems. That is not normal,” she said.

In neighborin­g Bosnia, several hundred people wearing face masks gathered in the city of Tuzla to demand a plan from authoritie­s to tackle pollution and phase out coal-fired plants in the next five years. “The only recommende­d measures are that we stay shut up at home... when you go out on the streets, in the playground­s, you won’t see children anywhere,” said Alisa Kasumovic, a mother in her forties.

Silent killer

According to a recent UN environmen­t report, air pollution causes nearly 20 percent of premature deaths in 19 Western Balkan cities. The main sources of the dust, soot and smoke are low-grade coal plants and household heating, the report said. More than 60 percent of people in the region rely on coal and firewood to heat their homes, the report said. Only 12 percent of buildings are connected to district heating systems.

Government­s need to make “clean energy more accessible”, ban old polluting vehicles and tighten regulation­s on industry emissions and power plants, the UN urged. Many people cannot afford cleaner heating options at home in countries where average wages are around Ä500 or less. Sali Ademi, a 78-year-old in Kosovo’s capital Pristina, uses coal. “There’s no worse thing, but what can you do?” he said in a city whose air is already poisoned by two nearby coal-fired power plants running on outdated technology.

 ?? — AFP ?? A photo shows smog over Sarajevo from a cable car as it travels from Mt Trebevic into the city on Jan 18, 2020.
— AFP A photo shows smog over Sarajevo from a cable car as it travels from Mt Trebevic into the city on Jan 18, 2020.

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