Death in the air
If a team of US researchers at Cornell University, New York are to be believed. 40 per cent of all deaths world-wide is due to environmental pollution. Global warming could worsen this scenario, they say. David Pimentel and 11 graduate students investigated the relationship. Between increasing pollution levels and' population trends, climate change and emerging diseases.
They concluded that air pollutant, adversely affect the health of four to five billion people every year. Global warming would exacerbate the problem, creating millions of environmental refugees" who would be forced to leave urban 'hot spots'.
"Humans are stressed and disease prevalence is worsened, by widespread malnutrition and the unprecedented increase in air, water and soil pollutants," wrote Pimentel in the October issue of the journal, Bioscience.
Using World Health Organisation figures, the researchers calculated that the impact of air pollution will get worse as the number of cars on the roads is rising at three times the rate of the world's population. Smoke from the door cooking fires kills four million children a year, and lack of sanitary conditions contributes to another four millions deaths, mostly among infants in developing countries, the team found.
Related Content
- Report by the Kerala State Pollution Control Board regarding Periyar river pollution, 19/11/2024
- Judgment of the National Green Tribunal regarding pollution of river Yamuna at Agra and Mathura-Vrindavan due to discharge of untreated sewage in the river, 24/04/2024
- Global hepatitis report 2024: action for access in low- and middle-income countries
- 2023 disasters in numbers
- Major air polluters in Africa unmasked
- 2023 world air quality report