The Star Malaysia

Worsening air pollution reducing lifespans

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Jakarta: Indonesia’s air quality has deteriorat­ed from among the cleanest in the world to one of the most polluted over the past two decades, shaving five years from life expectancy in some regions, researcher­s say.

The study by the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago says an increase in coal-fired power stations, burning of land for plantation agricultur­e and rising car ownership are responsibl­e for the worsening pollution in the world’s fourth-most populous country.

The greatest spike happened in the last few years with air pollution more than doubling between 2013 and 2016, it said.

The burden on public health has become one of the highest in the world, behind only India, China, Bangladesh and Pakistan.

“High air pollution is now underminin­g Indonesian­s’ health,” said researcher­s Michael Greenstone and Qing Fan.

“In 1998, air pollution barely impacted the life expectancy of Indonesian­s. In fact, even in 2013, it shaved only a few months off of average life expectancy.”

According to the researcher­s, sustained high concentrat­ions of particulat­e matter in the air people breath will cut 2.3 years from lifespans in the capital Jakarta.

On the islands of Sumatra and Borneo, both of which suffer land fires every year, the expected reduction in lifespans is four years on average.

It rises to 4.8 years for the southern Sumatran city of Palembang and 5.6 years for its neighbouri­ng Ogan Komering Ilir district.

Indonesia’s annual dry season fires were particular­ly disastrous in 2015, burning 2.6 million hectares of land and spreading health-damaging haze across Indonesia, Singapore, southern Thailand and Malaysia.

The World Bank estimated the fires cost Indonesia US$16bil (RM65bil) and a Harvard and Columbia study estimated the haze hastened 100,000 deaths in the region.

Less arid weather conditions resulted in reduced areas of land burning in the following three years though the area burned jumped again last year to more than 510,000ha.

The University of Chicago study said the air pollution effects are widespread.

Small particles carried by the wind from land fires at times contribute 31% of Jakarta’s “PM2.5” – tiny particles that cause haze when levels are elevated and which are linked to lung cancer, respirator­y illness and other diseases.

Citing the experience of cities such as London, Osaka and Los Angeles in reducing disastrous air pollution and China’s more recent progress, the researcher­s said Indonesia’s pollution problem is “solvable” through stricter regulation and stronger enforcemen­t.

 ?? — AP ?? Cause for concern: According to the researcher­s, sustained high concentrat­ions of particulat­e matter in the air people breathe will cut 2.3 years from lifespans in Jakarta.
— AP Cause for concern: According to the researcher­s, sustained high concentrat­ions of particulat­e matter in the air people breathe will cut 2.3 years from lifespans in Jakarta.

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