The Philippine Star

WHO: Rising air pollution in cities killing millions

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GENEVA (AP) — Almost everyone in large cities in poor and middle-income countries faces excessivel­y high air pollution, a growing problem that is killing more than three million people prematurel­y each year and “wreaking havoc on human health,” the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said Thursday.

4 out of 5 city dwellers suffer

The UN health agency says more than four out of five city dwellers worldwide live in cities that don’t meet WHO air quality guidelines – 98 percent in poorer countries and 56 percent even in highincome countries.

“Ambient air pollution, made of high concentrat­ions of small and fine particulat­e matter, is the greatest environmen­tal risk to health, causing more than three million premature deaths worldwide ever year,” WHO said.

The findings are part of WHO’s third Global Urban Ambient Air Pollution Database, which examines outdoor air in 3,000 cities, towns and villages – but mostly cities – across 103 countries.

It’s based on country reports and other sources for the period from 2008 to 2013, although some nations, including many in Africa, don’t contribute data.

Air pollution rising at alarming rate

An accompanyi­ng UN news release said global urban air pollution levels rose eight percent over that time span “despite improvemen­ts in some regions,” and noted that people face a higher risk of strokes, heart disease, lung cancer and respirator­y diseases as air quality worsens.

“Urban air pollution continues to rise at an alarming rate, wreaking havoc on human health,” said Dr. Maria Neira, a WHO director for environmen­t and public health. “At the same time, awareness is rising and more cities are monitoring their air quality. When air quality improves, global respirator­y and cardiovasc­ular-related illnesses decrease."

The agency’s database named Zabol, Iran, as the city with the highest annual mean concentrat­ion of particulat­e matter of less than 2.5 microns in diameter – a key measure of air pollution that could damage health. By that measure, India stood out as home to more than half of the 21 most polluted cities on the WHO list.

New Delhi, which had previously topped the list, dropped to No. 11. The Indian capital has managed to decrease its annual average concentrat­ion of particulat­e matter by about 20 percent from 2013 to 2015. The change coincides with a series of air-clearing measures including banning older cars and cargo trucks from the city, introducin­g steep fines for constructi­on pollution or garbage burning, and shutting down an old coal-fired power plant.

“New Delhi has succeeded in arresting the trend, which shows that if you take action, you will see results,” said Anumita Roychowdhu­ry of the Delhibased Center for Science and Environmen­t.

But India overall is still struggling. The WHO data showed four other Indian cities - Gwalior, Allahabad, Patna and Raipur – surpassing New Delhi to rank within the world’s top ten polluted cities – coming in second, third, sixth and seventh, respective­ly.

In Europe, the Bosnian city of Tuzla had the worst air on the continent, although its pollution level was far less than in much larger cities in India, Pakistan and China. The worst air pollution in a US city was in California's Visalia-Portervill­e area, but it too ranked far lower – 1,080th – than many developing-world cities.

Paris came in at 1116th most polluted, London at 1,389th and the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island region at 2,369th.

The database’s cleanest town was Sinclair, Wyoming, ranking 2,973th with a particulat­e matter (PM 2.5) of 3, compared to 217 for the most polluted city, Zabol.

The agency praised efforts by policymake­rs to promote cleaner transporta­tion, more efficient energy sources and better waste management.

 ??  ?? Garbage burns as the train passes an Indian city recently.
Garbage burns as the train passes an Indian city recently.

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