Current:Home > ContactStudy Identifies Outdoor Air Pollution as the ‘Largest Existential Threat to Human and Planetary Health’ -Global Capital Summit
Study Identifies Outdoor Air Pollution as the ‘Largest Existential Threat to Human and Planetary Health’
View
Date:2025-04-15 02:29:55
Since the turn of the century, global deaths attributable to air pollution have increased by more than half, a development that researchers say underscores the impact of pollution as the “largest existential threat to human and planetary health.”
The findings, part of a study published Tuesday in The Lancet Planetary Health, found that pollution was responsible for an estimated 9 million deaths around the world in 2019. Fully half of those fatalities, 4.5 million deaths, were the result of ambient, or outdoor, air pollution, which is typically emitted by vehicles and industrial sources like power plants and factories.
The number of deaths that can be attributed to ambient air pollution has increased by about 55 percent—to 4.5 million from 2.9 million—since the year 2000.
Deaths from ambient air and chemical pollution were so prevalent, the study’s authors said, that they offset a decline in the number of deaths from other pollution sources typically related to conditions of extreme poverty, including indoor air pollution and water pollution.
“Pollution is still the largest existential threat to human and planetary health and jeopardizes the sustainability of modern societies,” said Philip Landrigan, a co-author of the report who directs the Global Public Health Program and Global Pollution Observatory at Boston College.
The report noted that countries with lower collective incomes often bear a disproportionate share of the impacts of pollution deaths, and called on governments, businesses and other entities to abandon fossil fuels and adopt clean energy sources.
“Despite its enormous health, social and economic impacts, pollution prevention is largely overlooked in the international development agenda,” says Richard Fuller, the study’s lead author, who is the founder and CEO of the nonprofit environmental group Pure Earth. “Attention and funding has only minimally increased since 2015, despite well-documented increases in public concern about pollution and its health effects.”
The peer-reviewed study, produced by the 2017 Lancet Commission on Pollution and Health, using data from the 2015 Global Burden of Disease (GBD), found that roughly 1.2 million deaths were attributable to household air pollution (which generally comes from tobacco smoke, household products and appliances); about 1.3 million deaths were attributable to water pollution and 900,000 deaths were attributable to lead pollution.
All told, the study’s authors wrote, roughly 16 percent of deaths around the world are attributable to pollution, which resulted in more than $4 trillion in global economic losses.
Ambient air pollution can be generated by a range of sources, including wildfires.
Deepti Singh, an assistant professor at the School of the Environment at Washington State University, co-authored a separate study into how wildfires, extreme heat and wind patterns can deteriorate air quality.
She noted how in recent years smoke from wildfires in California and the American West has traveled across the United States all the way to the East Coast. At one point during the 2020 wildfire season, Singh said, residents in as much as 70 percent of the Western U.S. experienced negative air quality because of the blazes in the West.
“That wildfire smoke, you know, it has multiple harmful air pollutants,” Singh said. “We don’t even fully understand all the things that are in that smoke. But we know that it’s increasing fine particulate matter, which is something that directly affects our health. It’s something that we can inhale and it affects our cardiovascular and respiratory systems, and it can cause premature mortality and developmental harm—many, many different health impacts associated with that.”
One of those impacts, Singh said, was increased fatalities from Covid-19 and other respiratory illnesses.
“We’re talking about exposure of people to multiple air pollutants and also exposure of multiple people simultaneously to these air pollutants, which has implications for managing the burden that we’ve put on the health care system,” Singh said.
Michael Brauer, a professor at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, co-authored the study released Tuesday and noted that the 9 million annual deaths attributable to pollution were almost unchanged in the past five years.
“And that’s quite disheartening just given the really staggering impact that this has on health and that this is all preventable, basically,” he said.
“We actually know how to deal with this problem,” Brauer said, referring to the need to adopt clean energy solutions. “And yet we still have this impact.”
He said that he hoped the study would be a “a call to action.”
“Let’s take this seriously and put the resources that need to be put in—both financial resources, but really political willpower—to deal with this and we will have a healthier global population,” he said.
veryGood! (858)
Related
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Carly Rae Jepsen Engaged to Producer Cole MGN: See Her Ring
- Critics say lawmakers watered down California’s lemon car law after secret lobbyist negotiations
- Boy Meets World's Trina McGee Shares She Experienced a Miscarriage
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- University of California accused of labor violations over handling of campus protests
- Mack Brown apologizes for reaction after North Carolina's loss to James Madison
- 'Emily in Paris' star Lucas Bravo is more than a heartthrob: 'Mystery is sexy'
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Man serving life for Alabama murder also sentenced in Wisconsin killing
Ranking
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Colorado men tortured their housemate for 14 hours, police say
- Jennifer Lopez Sends Nikki Glaser Gift for Defending Her From Critics
- Kristen Bell Says She and Dax Shepard Let Kids Lincoln, 11, and Delta, 9, Roam Around Theme Park Alone
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- The boyfriend of a Navajo woman is set to be sentenced in her killing
- Southeast US under major storm warning as hurricane watch issued for parts of Cuba and Mexico
- How red-hot Detroit Tigers landed in MLB playoff perch: 'No pressure, no fear'
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
California becomes latest state to restrict student smartphone use at school
Emory Callahan Introduction
Colorado grocery store mass shooter found guilty of murdering 10
Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
Memphis man testifies that he and another man killed rapper Young Dolph
Donna Kelce Reacts After Being Confused for Taylor Swift's Mom Andrea Swift
Alsobrooks presses the case for national abortion rights in critical Maryland Senate race