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Bangladesh most polluted in the world, Pak 2nd, India 3rd; Delhi, Dhaka ranked 1st, 2nd among cities

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Living in toxic air

Global survey says Bangladesh has most polluted air; Dhaka 2nd most polluted capital city

Mohammad Al-Masum Molla

https://www.thedailystar.net/frontp...ed-air-city-in-world-living-toxic-air-1711213

  • Delhi most polluted capital city; 22 of top 30 polluted cities are in India
  • Brick kilns, vehicles emitting sulphur main cause of pollution
  • UN rapporteur terms air pollution silent, prolific killer
  • Every hour, 800 people die suffering diseases caused by polluted air


Bangladesh has the most polluted air in the world and Dhaka is the second most polluted capital city, according to a new study.

“At a country level, weighted by population, Bangladesh emerges as the most polluted country,” said the 2018 World Air Quality Report released yesterday. Greenpeace and AirVisual, who monitor global air quality, prepared the report based on last year's data collected from public monitoring sources.

Gurgaon, a suburb of the Indian capital New Delhi, is the world's most polluted city, says the report, which ranks Dhaka 17th in that category.

Take mouse cursor on the interactive map to see the air pollution status of the countries

According to the report, air pollution will cause around 7 million premature deaths globally next year and have a major economic impact.

Bangladesh, one of the most densely-populated countries in the world, has been struggling with air pollution for long. Dhaka, the country's capital, often finds its place among the most polluted cities in global indices.

Brick kilns and vehicles run on fuel with higher level of sulfur have been identified as the major sources of air pollution in the country.



But Md Ziaul Haque, director (air quality management) of the Department of Environment (DoE), said there was confusion in the report which placed Bangladesh at the top in the country category.

“The average air quality of Dhaka and the entire Bangladesh are different. The air in rural areas and other districts is much healthier than in Dhaka,” he said.

According to the report, four of the five most polluted countries in the world are in South Asia. Bangladesh is followed by Pakistan, India, Afghanistan and Bahrain.

The quality of air in Iceland, Finland and Australia are among the healthiest, the report shows.

Delhi is the most polluted capital city while Dhaka is second in that category followed by Kabul, Manama and Ulaanbaatar of Mongolia, according to the report.

The report said seven of the top 10 most polluted cities in the world are in India. Gurugram is followed by Ghaziabad and Faisalabad (Pakistan). Indian cities of Faridabad, Noida, and Bhiwadi come next in the category.

The city ranking shows Asian locations dominating the highest 100 average PM 2.5 during 2018, with cities in India, China, Pakistan and Bangladesh occupying the top 50 spots.

The report focuses on PM2.5 as a measurement of air pollution. PM2.5 refers to particulate matter (ambient airborne particles) which measure up to 2.5 microns in size, and has a range of chemical makeup and sources.

Due to its small size PM2.5 is able to penetrate deep into the human respiratory system and from there to the entire body, causing a wide range of short- and long-term health effects, the report said.

In a statement, Yeb Sano, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said, “Air pollution steals our livelihoods and our futures, but we can change that.

“In addition to human lives lost, there is an estimated global cost of $225 billion in lost labour, and trillions in medical costs. This has enormous impacts on our health and on our wallet”.

Talking to The Daily Star, DoE Director Ziaul said in Bangladesh, brick kilns were the major source of air pollution followed by construction work.

He claimed that the government has taken various steps to reduce emission of harmful smoke from brick kilns, including promoting cement blocks for construction work.

In a report by US-based Environmental Protection Index (EPI) on the environment performance by the government of 180 countries, Bangladesh ranked 179, having slipped down by 40 places from the year 2010 to 2018. The report was published in September last year.

According to the DoE and the World Bank, brick kilns make up 56 percent of the country's air pollution.

The government had enacted a law in 2018 to make these kilns environment friendly, but a recent report indicated that of the 7,772 brick kilns in the country, 2,123 have not converted to the required modern and environment-friendly technology.

Meanwhile on Monday, David Boyd, special rapporteur on human rights and the environment, insisted that air pollution was a “silent, sometimes invisible, prolific killer” which affected women and girls more than men.

“Air pollutants are everywhere, largely caused by burning fossil fuels for electricity, transportation and heating, as well as from industrial activities, poor waste management and agricultural practices,” he said at the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Air pollution is present both inside homes and outside and is responsible for the premature death of seven million people each year, including 600,000 children, according to the special rapporteur's UN environmental annual report.

“Every hour, 800 people are dying, many after years of suffering, from cancer, respiratory illnesses or heart disease directly caused by breathing polluted air,” he said, before highlighting that effective measures could have prevented those deaths.


lung.jpg



Why PM2.5?
The report focuses on PM2.5 as a representative measure of air pollution. PM2.5 refers to particulate matter (ambient airborne particles) which measure up to 2.5 microns in size, and has a range of chemical makeups and sources. PM2.5 is widely regarded as the pollutant with the most health impact of all commonly measured air pollutants. Due to its small size PM2.5 is able to penetrate deep into the human respiratory system and from there to the entire body, causing a wide range of short- and long-term health effects. Particulate matter is also the pollutant group which affects the most people globally. It can come from a range of natural as well as man-made sources. Common sources of PM include combustion (from vehicle engines, industry, wood and coal burning), as well as through other pollutants reacting in the atmosphere.
 
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What is Bangladesh doing about its air pollution problem?
 
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India has the world's worst air pollution: report
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and China are home to the 50 cities worldwide with the dirtiest air, new study shows.

by David Child
12 hours ago
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/03/india-world-worst-air-pollution-report-190305151923982.html
129e0cf0332b4d31ac84c0f93388da50_18.jpg

New Delhi, home to more than 20 million people, is the world's most polluted capital city [Adnan Abidi/Reuters]
MORE ON INDIA
Seven of the world's 10 worst polluted cities are in India, a new study has revealed, with wider South Asia home to scores more blighted by dirty air.

Gurugram, a city about 30km southwest of India's capital New Delhi, had the worst pollution levels globally in 2018, the study published on Tuesday by AirVisual and Greenpeace showed.

Three other Indian cities, and Faisalabad, in Pakistan, made up the top five. Out of the 20 most polluted cities worldwide, 18 were in India, Pakistanand Bangladesh.

New Delhi, home to more than 20 million people, was ranked at 11, making it the world's most polluted capital, ahead of Dhaka, in Bangladesh, and Kabul, in Afghanistan.

Top 10 most polluted cities
1. Gurugram, India
2. Ghaziabad, India
3. Faisalabad, Pakistan
4. Faridabad, India
5. Bhiwadi, India
6. Noida, India
7. Patna, India
8. Hotan, China
9. Lucknow, India
10. Lahore, Pakistan
"Air pollution steals our livelihoods and our futures," Yeb Sano, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said in a statement. "In addition to human lives lost, there's an estimated global cost of 225 billion dollars in lost labour, and trillions in medical costs," he added.

"We want this report to make people think about the air we breathe, because when we understand the impacts of air quality on our lives, we will act to protect what's most important."

'Catastrophic level of air pollution'
The AirVisual and Greenpeace index was based on the quantity of PM2.5 registered last year in tens of thousands of air-quality monitoring stations around the world.

PM2.5 is particulate matter that has a diameter of less than 2.5 micrometres, which is about three percent the diameter of a human hair.

The 92 most-polluted cities all had an "unhealthy" average annual presence of the particles, which can penetrate deep in the lungs and bloodstream and cause a wide range of adverse health effects, including premature death in the most extreme cases.

The World Health Organization estimates seven million people are killed every year due to air pollution, while non-fatal effects of over-exposure to PM2.5 include irregular heartbeats, aggravated asthma and decreased lung function, according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency.

READ MORE
Gap in air quality between rich and poorer countries increases
Lauri Myllyvirta, a senior analyst for Greenpeace's Global Air Pollution Unit, said there were a "number of reasons" for the high quantities of the particulate matter throughout South Asia documented in Tuesday's report.

"The biggest sources are generally household emissions, industrial emissions ... and transport," he told Al Jazeera.

"A lot of households in South Asia rely on solid fuels, sometimes biomass, often coal, for their cooking and heating … and there are often cities with large scale industries with poor emissions controls," he added.

Myllyvirta also attributed South Asia's high population density as another contributing factor to the region's poor air quality.

"You do have other places with similar levels of emissions, but because you have far fewer people [there], it doesn't lead to this kind of … catastrophic level of air pollution," he said.

South Asia has the highest population density of any region within Asia, which itself is the most densely populated continent on earth.

'Our bodies are suffering'
In India, South Asia's most populous country, with about 1.3 billion people, researchers warned that current levels of air pollution represented a "public health emergency" requiring a "full emergency mode" response from local and national authorities.

"We are enduring this but our bodies are still suffering from it ... [and] governments are trying to fix the blame rather than the problem," Jyoti Pande Lavakare, president and cofounder of Delhi-based NGO Care for Air India, told Al Jazeera.

"It is horrific to live under such poor air quality conditions," she added.

READ MORE
India's polluted air killed 1.24 million in 2017: study
Led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India has focused on delivering economic growth in a bid to boost employment and drag millions out of poverty.

But critics have accused his administration of failing to adequately address environmental issues, including air pollution, and rejected New Delhi's recently minted National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) as insufficient.

Lavakare said the NCAP, which aims to cut concentrations of PM2.5 and PM10 (larger particulate matter) throughout the country between 20-30 percent by 2024, was a "reactive" attempt to clean up India's air and called on New Delhi to take a more "proactive approach".

"We need year-round measures on a national scale," she said, adding there was a need for "cleaner fuels for motorised transport, removing subsidies on dirty fuels, enforcing strict controls on open waste burning and reducing industrial emissions".

A spokesperson for the Indian health ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

China cuts emissions
Tuesday's report highlighted improved air quality levels elsewhere in Asia, however, with Chinese cities, in particular, registering a 12 percent fall in average PM2.5 concentrations since 2017.

While the Asian economic powerhouse still accounted for 22 of the 50 most polluted cities worldwide, its capital, Beijing, showed a marked improvement on 2017 levels of pollution, with the average annual presence of particulates falling by more than 13 percent last year.

AirVisual and Greenpeace said the reduction was a result of the "extensive monitoring networks" and effective "air pollution reduction policies" rolled out by Chinese authorities in recent years.

READ MORE
'Zero tolerance': China steps up pollution prosecutions
Under President Xi Jinping, China's ruling Communist Party has pledged to wage a "war" on the country's chronic air, water and land pollution.

Greenpeace's Myllyvirta said China's progress on reducing air pollution demonstrated the need for policymakers to fully "understand" the issue first, through effective data collection and measurement.

Describing Tuesday's report as "very alarming and very concerning" for the most part, Myllyvirta praised Beijing for showing "what can be achieved when a country makes tackling air pollution a top priority".

INSIDE STORY

World failing to tackle deadly pollution crisis?

22 of world's 30 most polluted cities are in India, Greenpeace says


Analysis of air pollution data finds that 64% of cities globally exceed WHO guidelines

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Nick Van Mead

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Tue 5 Mar 2019 15.43 GMTLast modified on Tue 5 Mar 2019 15.45 GMT

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Heavy smog hangs over along a busy road in New Delhi. Photograph: Xavier Galiana/AFP/Getty Images
Twenty-two of the world’s 30 worst cities for air pollution are in India, according to a new report, with Delhi again ranked the world’s most polluted capital.

The Greenpeace and AirVisual analysis of air pollution readings from 3,000 cities around the world found that 64% exceed the World Health Organization’s annual exposure guideline for PM2.5 fine particulate matter – tiny airborne particles, about a 40th of the width of a human hair, that are linked to a wide range of health problems.

Every single measured city in the Middle East and Africa exceeds the WHO guidelines, as well as 99% of cities in south Asia and 89% in east Asia. Since many cities, particularly in Africa, do not have up-to-date public air quality information, the actual number of cities exceeding PM2.5 thresholds is expected to be much higher, the report authors said.

The report is based on 2018 air quality data from public monitoring sources, such as government monitoring networks, supplemented with validated data from outdoor IQAir AirVisual monitors operated by private individuals and organisations.

India dominates the top of the list. The tech hub of Gurugram, a city just to the south-west of Delhi which was previously known as Gurgaon, and where international firms including Uber and TripAdvisor have headquarters, ranked the most polluted in the world with an average of more than 135 micrograms of PM2.5 per cubic metre (µg/m3) throughout the year. Delhi is ranked 11th.

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Faisalabad in Pakistan is ranked third with 130 (µg/m3), with Lahore 10th. Dhaka in Bangladesh is ranked 17th. The only other country to feature in the top 30 is China, which appears five times, including Hotan in the western Xinjiang province (eighth) and the ancient Silk Road city of Kashgar (19th).

The highest-ranking capital cities are Delhi, Dhaka and Kabul in Afghanistan (52nd). The Bosnian capital, Sarajevo, is the most polluted European city with an annual average of 38.4 µg/m3. London is the 48th most polluted capital with 12.0 µg/m3 and Washington DC 56th with 9.2 µg/m3.

“Air pollution steals our livelihoods and our futures, but we can change that,” said Yeb Saño, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia. “We want this report to make people think about the air we breathe, because when we understand the impacts of air quality on our lives, we will act to protect what’s most important.”

The WHO estimates that 7 million people a year die prematurely from exposure to air pollution globally, with the World Bank calculating the cost to the world economy in lost labour as $225bn.

https://www.theguardian.com/cities/...orlds-30-most-polluted-cities-greenpeace-says
 
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Things to do : I will only speak for Pakistan.
  1. Start 10 billion tree project , work as hard as possible.
  2. Start using 100s of KM of coastline , start planting Mangroves there.
  3. Start building waist plants ,,,,,
  4. Start punishing people for burning left over of crops (fields)
Indian and Bangladeshi people and Govts are welcome to do the same...…
 
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I think that is more because of the fact that Bangladeshis can't afford new Cars.

Nice thread hijacking troll post - reported.

Yeah we all drive around in bicycles wearing lungis. Did it escape your attention that Bangladesh per capita GDP is higher than yours in Pakistan? Do the math... :-)

The real story is high tax, much higher than either Pakistan or India. Import VAT is 15%, 25% import duty on 1.5L engine and 100% import duty fee up to 2 Litre size, then 200% and beyond depending on size of engine. Bangladeshis typically don't drive Suzuki Mehran size vehicles...minimum Corolla size.
 
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Things to do : I will only speak for Pakistan.
  1. Start 10 billion tree project , work as hard as possible.
  2. Start using 100s of KM of coastline , start planting Mangroves there.
  3. Start building waist plants ,,,,,
  4. Start punishing people for burning left over of crops (fields)
Indian and Bangladeshi people and Govts are welcome to do the same...…

All being done already....
 
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Yeah we all drive around in bicycles wearing lungis.
I believe if you say so..
Did it escape your attention that Bangladesh per capita GDP is higher than yours in Pakistan? Do the math... :-)
Ehh not again..
GDP of a country can't be indicator of its citizens being rich. As "2 percent" of individuals own 98% of the wealth in South Asia.
100% import duty fee up to 2 Litre size, then 200% and beyond depending on size of engine.
Same is the case with Pakistan. 200% tax on imported luxury cars. Still those cars bought in masses. I wonder why..
Btw what bicycle you use? & lungi brand? Share pics if you got some. Thanks.
 
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Although a lot of the pollution has to do with industrialization, it has something to do with the geography as well. The himalayas, kinda prevents wind from the north to sweep away the air in the ganga-indus plains, this is true especially during the winter season. Gotta start investing in renewables.

73271-jtmmsibpqn-1510146185.jpeg


nasa-Wang.jpg
 
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