9 Million Died Cause Of Pollution: Report

Pollution is an "existential threat to human health."


Taking notes from the new global report published, Pollution caused some 9 million people to die prematurely in 2019 experts raising alarm over increasing deaths from breathing outside air and the "horrifying" toll of lead poisoning.  

Human-created waste in the air, water and soil rarely kills people immediately but causes instead heart disease, cancer, respiratory problems, diarrhea and other serious illnesses.

According to the Lancet Commission on pollution and health said the impact of pollution on global health remains "much greater than that of war, terrorism, malaria, HIV, tuberculosis, drugs and alcohol".

The report also added, Pollution is an "existential threat to human health and planetary health, and jeopardizes the sustainability of modern societies."

In general, the review found that air pollution -- accounting for a total of 6.7 million deaths globally in 2019 -- was "entwined" with climate change because the main source of both problems is burning fossil fuels and biofuels.

"If we can't manage to grow in a clean and greenway, we're doing something wrong," said the report's lead author Richard Fuller, of the Global Alliance on Health and Pollution, adding that chemical pollution also harms biodiversity -- another major global threat.

"These things are connected and strategies to deal with one have ripple effects all the way through," he said.

Overall, one in six premature deaths globally -- or nine million -- were caused by pollution, a figure unchanged since the last assessment in 2015.

Researchers noted a reduction in mortality linked to indoor air pollution, unsafe drinking water and inadequate sanitation, with major improvements seen in Africa.

But early deaths associated with industrialization -- outdoor air and chemical pollution -- are on the rise, particularly in southern and eastern Asia.

Ambient air pollution caused some 4.5 million deaths in 2019, according to the study, published in Lancet Planetary Health, compared with 4.2 million in 2015 and just 2.9 million in 2000.

Chemical pollution is also increasing, with lead poisoning alone causing 900,000 deaths. Even that, the report warned, is likely a "substantial undercount" in light of new research suggesting there is no safe level of exposure.

 

 

 

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