Air pollution shortens life expectancy in Bangladesh by average 4.8 yrs: WHO
UNB
Publish: 28 Aug 2024, 12:05 PM
Dhaka,
Aug 28 (UNB) - Bangladesh is the world's most polluted country and ine
particulate air pollution (PM2.5) shortens the average Bangladeshi resident's
life expectancy by 4.8 years, relative to what it would be if the World Health
Organization (WHO) guideline of 5 µg/m³ was met, says a new global report
released on Wednesday.
Some areas of Bangladesh
fare much worse than others, such as the Gazipur and Narsingdi districts, where
air pollution is shortening lives by more than 6 years, it said.
KEY TAKE-AWAYS
All of Bangladesh's
166.4 million people live in areas where the annual average particulate
pollution level exceeds both the WHO guideline and 96.8 percent of the
country's population live in regions that don't meet the country's own national
standard of 35 µg/m³. Even in the least polluted district of Sylhet,
particulate pollution is 6.7 times the WHO guideline.
While particulate
pollution takes 4.8 years off the life of the average Bangladeshi, tobacco use
takes off 2 years and child and maternal malnutrition takes off 1.4 years.
In 2022, particulate
pollution was 22 percent lower relative to 2021-a contrast to the increasing
trend between 2015-2021. If the reduction in 2022 is sustained, an average
Bangladeshi resident would live 1 year longer compared to what they would if
they were exposed to the average pollution levels over the last decade.
In some of the most
polluted districts of the country spread across the states of Dhaka and
Chittagong, 75.9 million residents or 45.6 percent of Bangladesh's population
are on track to lose 5.4 years of life expectancy on average relative to the
WHO guideline.
If Bangladesh were to
reduce particulate pollution to meet the WHO guideline, residents in Dhaka-the
most populous district in Bangladesh-would gain 5.6 years of life expectancy.
In Chittagong-the country's second most populous district-residents would gain
5.2 years. Even if pollution levels in Dhaka and Chittagong were to meet
Bangladesh's national standard, life expectancy in these districts would
increase by 2.6 and 2.3 years, respectively.
Air Pollution Remains
the Greatest External Risk to Human Health
While pollution slightly
dipped due largely to a trend reversal in South Asia, more than three-quarters
of countries around the world have not set or aren't meeting national pollution
standards.
Though global pollution
was slightly lower in 2022, its burden on life expectancy remains, according to
new data from the Air Quality Life Index (AQLI).
If the world were to
permanently reduce fine particulate pollution (PM2.5) to meet the World Health
Organization's (WHO) guideline, the average person would add 1.9 years onto
their life expectancy-or a combined 14.9 billion life-years saved worldwide.
This data makes clear
that particulate pollution is the world's greatest external risk to human
health. Its impact on life expectancy is comparable to that of smoking, more
than 4 times that of high alcohol use, more than 5 times that of transport
injuries like car crashes, and more than 6 times that of HIV/AIDS.
Yet, the pollution
challenge worldwide is vastly unequal, with people living in the most polluted
places on earth breathing air that is six times more polluted than the air
breathed by those living in the least polluted places-and seeing their lives
cut short by 2.7 years more because of it.
"While air
pollution remains a global problem, its largest impacts are concentrated in a
relatively small number of countries-cutting lives short several years in some
places and even more than 6 years in some regions," says Michael
Greenstone, the Milton Friedman Distinguished Service Professor in Economics
and creator of the AQLI along with colleagues at the Energy Policy Institute at
the University of Chicago (EPIC).
"All too often,
high pollution concentrations reflect low ambition in setting policy or a
failure to successfully enforce existing policies. As countries balance their
economic, health, and environmental goals, the AQLI will continue to shine a
light on the longer lives that air pollution reductions deliver."
National standards are
an important tool to set strong policies and improve air quality. These
standards-some strong and some weak-reflect the multiple policy goals countries
have as they balance economic, environmental and health goals.
However, a third of the
world's population lives in regions that don't meet the standards that their
countries have set.
If those countries did
meet their own benchmarks, these 3 billion people would live an average of 1.2
years longer.
"Setting ambitious
standards is only one part of the puzzle," says Tanushree Ganguly, the
director of the AQLI. "Equally important is implementing policies and
monitoring mechanisms that help enforce these standards. Some countries are
succeeding in this, and that gives proof that air pollution is a solvable
problem."
While 37 out of 94
countries with standards aren't meeting them, more than half of all countries
and territories have not set a standard at all. Together, 77 percent of
countries and territories worldwide have either not met or do not have a
national standard.
Of the countries with no
standard, almost none (less than 1 percent) of the governments provide fully
open pollution data and two-thirds don't have any government pollution
monitoring. With little data, it is difficult to set pollution standards and
enforce them.
To help confront this
challenge, this year EPIC launched the EPIC Air Quality Fund to support local
groups and organizations in installing monitors and providing open data to
communities that could benefit the most.
"Highly polluted countries
that have little or no air quality data often fall into a bad feedback cycle
where having little data leads to little attention or policy investment in the
issue which reinforces little demand for data," says Christa Hasenkopf,
the director of the Clean Air Program at EPIC.
"Fortunately, there
is a massive opportunity to stop this cycle with even a small amount of
persistent, open air quality data. Such data has been shown to be essential for
crafting and reinforcing national standards."
South Asia
Global pollution
declined in 2022 due almost entirely to a trend reversal in South Asia. While
pollution had been on the rise for more than a decade, it declined by 18
percent in one year.
While it's difficult to
know for sure the reasons for this decline, meteorological causes-such as above
normal rainfall-likely played a strong role and only time will tell whether
policy changes are having an impact.
Even with the decline,
the region remains the most polluted in the world, accounting for 45 percent of
total life years lost due to high pollution.
The average person
living in these countries would gain 3.5 years onto their lives if pollution
were permanently reduced to meet the World Health Organization guideline.
END/UNB/MK/F