Most pollution-linked deaths occur in India.

Why it is in news?

  • India has been ranked No. 1 in pollution related deaths
  •  2.51 million deaths in 2015
  • Report by The Lancet Commission on pollution and health.
  • China recorded the second highest number of such deaths (1.8 million).
  • India accounted for about 28 per cent of an estimated nine million pollution linked deaths worldwide in 2015.

What is the report?

  • The Lancet Commission on pollution and health is a two-year project in which more than 40 international health and environmental authors led by environmental scientist Philip Landrigan were involved.

Finding Of Report

  • At 6.5 million premature deaths globally, air pollution was the leading cause of deaths in 2015.
  •      With 1.58 million, China had the second-highest number of air pollution deaths after India (1.81 million). But the number of water pollution deaths in China was only about 34,000, compared to 0.64 million in the case of India.
  • Nearly 25% of all deaths in India in 2015 were caused by pollution; Pakistan, China, Bangladesh, and Kenya too reported that one in four deaths were caused by pollution.
  •  Air pollution: the number of deaths in India from ambient air pollution was 1.09 million, while deaths from household air pollution from solid fuels were 0.97 million.
  •  Water pollution: 0.5 million deaths were caused by unsafe water source, while unsafe sanitation caused 0.32 million deaths.
  •  Several cities in India and China recorded average annual concentrations of particulate matter PM2·5 pollution of greater than 100 μg/m³, and more than 50% of global deaths due to ambient air pollution in 2015 occurred in India and China.
  • Deaths from air pollution were a result of diseases such as heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
  • Pollution has been responsible for the most non-communicable disease deaths.
  • Pollution is responsible for more deaths than a high-sodium diet (4·1 million), obesity (4·0 million), alcohol (2·3 million), road accidents (1·4 million), or child and maternal malnutrition (1·4 million)
  • Pollution was also responsible for three times as many deaths as AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria combined 

 

 

Posted by Jawwad Kazi on 21st Oct 2017