Consumption in the G20 Nations Causes Particulate Air Pollution Resulting in Two Million Premature Deaths Annually
by Keisuke Nansai, Susumu Tohno, Satoru Chatani, Keiichiro Kanemoto, Shigemi Kagawa, Yasushi Kondo, Wataru Takayanagi & Manfred Lenzen
November 2, 2021
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-26348-y
Abstract:
(Nature)Worldwide exposure to ambient PM2.5 causes over 4 million premature deaths annually. As most of these deaths are in developing countries, without internationally coordinated efforts this polarized situation will continue. As yet, however, no studies have quantified nation-to-nation consumer responsibility for global mortality due to both primary and secondary PM2.5 particles. Here we quantify the global footprint of PM2.5-driven premature deaths for the 19 G20 nations in a position to lead such efforts. G20 consumption in 2010 was responsible for 1.983 [95% Confidence Interval: 1.685–2.285] million premature deaths, at an average age of 67, including 78.6 [71.5–84.8] thousand infant deaths, implying that the G20 lifetime consumption of about 28 [24–33] people claims one life. Our results indicate that G20 nations should take responsibility for their footprint rather than focusing solely on transboundary air pollution, as this would expand opportunities for reducing PM2.5-driven premature mortality. Given the infant mortality footprint identified, it would moreover contribute to ensuring infant lives are not unfairly left behind in countries like South Africa, which have a weak relationship with G20 nations.
Introduction
To achieve planetary health1, a world that is healthy for both the global biosphere and human civilization, the critical challenge is to mitigate the human health hazards, as well as suppress the environmental impacts created by socioeconomic activities, reining in the latter to within the Earth’s environmental tolerance. Among the many environmental problems affecting human health, the greatest threat is that posed by the inhalation of particles with an aerodynamic diameter of 2.5 μm or less, abbreviated to PM2.52. According to the World Health Organization (WHO)3, in 2016 respiratory and cardiovascular diseases and cancer caused by exposure to ambient PM2.5 were responsible for approximately 4.2 million premature deaths, i.e., deaths occurring before the average age of death in thepopulation concerned. The majority of these deaths were in countries with low and middle incomes3, while 91% of the global population lives in areas where air quality is below WHO guidelines4. The loss to the global workforce due to premature deaths attributable to PM2.5 was equivalent to 225 billion US dollars in 20135. While the reduction in air pollution due to the COVID-19 pandemic6 has mitigated human health impacts somewhat, it is neither sufficient nor lasting7,8,9.
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