BEIJING, CHINA - NOVEMBER 30: A Chinese woman wears a mask as she walks through a very hazy Tiananmen Square on a day of heavy pollution on November 30, 2015 in Beijing, China. China's capital and many cities in the northern part of the country recorded the worst smog of the year with air quality devices in some areas unable to read such high levels of pollutants. Levels of PM 2.5, considered the most hazardous, crossed 600 units in Beijing, nearly 25 times the acceptable standard set by the World Health Organization. The governments of more than 190 countries are meeting in Paris this week to set targets on reducing carbon emissions in an attempt to forge a new global agreement on climate change. (Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)
The State of Global Air report is out with some startling facts about the deteriorating air quality and its drastic repercussions on the world, especially South Asia.
The report states that air pollution is going to shorten the life expectancy of children born today by 20-month average and will impact South Asia the most. Moreover, air pollution is the fifth major cause of premature death across the globe.
In fact, it causes more deaths than malaria, malnutrition, road accidents, or alcohol. The report added, “the loss of life expectancy is not borne equally”. The children in South Asia are more prone to having their lives reduced by 30 months because of a combination of dirty indoor and outdoor air pollution.
For East Asia, reduction in child life expectancy was estimated at 23 months, as compared to around 20 weeks for children in developed parts of the Asia Pacific and North America.
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Moreover, the top five countries with the highest mortality rate due to air pollution belonged to Asia, mostly South Asia. These countries include China, India, Pakistan, Indonesia, and Bangladesh.
China remained the country with the highest mortality rate because of air pollution that caused around 852,000 pollution-related deaths in 2017.
The report further reveals that 147 million years of healthy life across the globe fell victim to pollution in 2017. It estimates that if the air pollution levels are controlled as per the World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines, life expectancy in Bangladesh will increase by 1.3 years, while India, Pakistan, and Nigeria will see a rise of 1 year.
The report has been published by the US-based Health Effects Institute and the University of British Columbia.