Air pollution killed 238,000 Europeans prematurely in 2020 | Daily News

Air pollution killed 238,000 Europeans prematurely in 2020

The World Health Organization (WHO) has reported that substandard air quality is responsible for 7 million deaths around the world.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has reported that substandard air quality is responsible for 7 million deaths around the world.

DENMARK: Fine particle air pollution led to 238,000 premature deaths in the European Union in 2020, the bloc’s environmental watchdog said Thursday, a slight rise from 2019.

Across the 27-nation bloc that year, “exposure to concentrations of fine particulate matter above the 2021 World Health Organisation (WHO) guideline level resulted in 238,000 premature deaths”, the European Environment Agency (EEA) said in a new report.

That was slightly more than those recorded in 2019 in the EU, despite a fall in emissions due to Covid-19 curbs.

Fine particulate matter, or PM2.5, is a term for fine particulates that are typically the by-product of car exhausts or coal-fired power plants.

Their tiny size enables them to travel deep into the respiratory tract, worsening the risk of bronchitis, asthma and lung disease.

Also in 2020, exposure to Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) above the WHO’s recommended threshold led to 49,000 premature deaths in the EU, the EEA said. Acute exposure to Ozone (O3) caused 24,000 people to die early.

“When comparing 2020 to 2019, the number of premature deaths attributable to air pollution increased for PM2.5 but decreased for NO2 and O3,” the agency said. “For PM 2.5, falls in concentrations were counteracted by an increase in deaths due to the pandemic.”According to the WHO, air pollution causes seven million premature deaths per year worldwide, putting it on par with smoking or poor diets.

- INDIA TODAY

 


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