Exposure to household burning emissions and coal combustion were the main reasons behind 75 per cent of air pollution-related deaths in India in 2015 which came chiefly from rural areas, reveals a report.
75% pollution-linked deaths due to household burning
HIGHLIGHTS
- Household burning emissions and coal combustion caused 75% deaths
- Internal pollution responsible for most pollution-linked deaths
- Pollution is second most serious risk factor for public health in India
'This systematic analysis of emissions from all sources and their impact on ambient air pollution exposure found significant contributions from regional sources (like residential biomass, agricultural residue burning and industrial coal), underlying that from local sources (like transportation and brick kilns),' said Chandra Venkataraman from IIT-Bombay. According to the 2015 Global Burden of Disease analysis, these levels contribute to over 10 per cent of all Indian deaths each year. The premature mortality, attributed to air pollution, contributed to over 29 million healthy years of life lost. Overall, air pollution contributed to nearly 1.1 million deaths in 2015, with the burden falling disproportionately (75 per cent) on rural areas.
The 2017 Global Burden of Disease identified air pollution, both outdoors and in households, as the second most serious risk factor for public health in India, after malnutrition, contributing to 6.4 per cent of all healthy years of life lost in 2016. 'India has some of the highest levels of outdoor air pollution in the world,' the researchers wrote in the 'Special Report 21, Burden of Disease Attributable to Major Air Pollution Sources in India'. 'The most comprehensive air pollution estimates available from both satellite and Indian ground-level measurements of fine particulate matter indicate that 99.9 per cent of the Indian population is estimated to live in areas where the World Health Organisation Air Quality Guideline for fine particulate matter was exceeded in 2015, contributing to some 1.1 million deaths in India in 2015.'
This new study provides the first comprehensive assessment conducted in India to understand exposures at national and state levels from all major sources of particulate-matter air pollution (particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter of less than 2.5 m, or PM2.5). It takes advantage of enhanced satellite data and India's growing network of air pollution monitors, and is the first to estimate the exposure from different air pollution sources state by state throughout India.
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