Air pollution: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Air pollution inequality.png|thumb|Yellow, orange, and red indicate increasingly higher levels of air pollution (by nation-state)]]
[[File:Air pollution inequality.png|thumb|Yellow, orange, and red indicate increasingly higher levels of air pollution (by nation-state)]]
The impacts of air pollution are experienced unevenly on a global scale. A 2013 World Bank report found that "children under age 5 in lower-income countries are more than 60 times as likely to die from exposure to air pollution as children in high-income countries."<ref>https://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/09/08/making-case-clean-air-world-bank-says-pollution-cost-global-economy-5-trillion</ref> This report found that both deaths and nonfatal illnesses attributable to air pollution were disproportionately twice as common in "developing" (poorer/colonized) nations as opposed to "developed" (wealthier/colonizer) nations.
The impacts of air pollution are experienced unevenly on a global scale. A 2013 World Bank report found that "children under age 5 in lower-income countries are more than 60 times as likely to die from exposure to air pollution as children in high-income countries."<ref>https://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/09/08/making-case-clean-air-world-bank-says-pollution-cost-global-economy-5-trillion</ref> This report found that both deaths and nonfatal illnesses attributable to air pollution were disproportionately twice as common in "developing" (poorer/colonized) nations as opposed to "developed" (wealthier/colonizer) nations.
= Related =
[[Climate Hell]]


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=Sources=

Latest revision as of 05:01, 25 June 2023

Air pollution is the single greatest cause of preventable mortality today, killing approximately nine million people every year. Air pollution today is proximately caused, above all else, by particles from fossil fuel combustion contaminating the air; fossil fuel pollution accounts for approximately two-thirds of all air pollution. As a leading cause of numerous ailments including lung cancer, heart attacks, and depression, the air pollution pandemic has been the world's deadliest for decades, and is a key example of how the breakdown of human health and environmental health are intertwined.

Global Inequality

Yellow, orange, and red indicate increasingly higher levels of air pollution (by nation-state)

The impacts of air pollution are experienced unevenly on a global scale. A 2013 World Bank report found that "children under age 5 in lower-income countries are more than 60 times as likely to die from exposure to air pollution as children in high-income countries."[1] This report found that both deaths and nonfatal illnesses attributable to air pollution were disproportionately twice as common in "developing" (poorer/colonized) nations as opposed to "developed" (wealthier/colonizer) nations.


Related

Climate Hell

Sources