The index measures the presence of fine particulate matter known as PM2.5, a pollutant that can fester deep in the lungs and bloodstream of human beings.
Seven
of the top 10 most
polluted cities in the world are in India, according to a new
study showing South Asia’s battle with deteriorating air quality
and the economic toll it’s expected to take worldwide.
Gurugram,
located southwest of India’s capital New Delhi, led all cities in
pollution levels in 2018, even as its score improved from the
previous year, according to data released by IQAir AirVisual and
Greenpeace. Three other Indian cities joined Faisalabad, Pakistan, in
the top five.
The
index measures the presence of fine particulate matter known as
PM2.5, a pollutant that can fester deep in the lungs and bloodstream
of human beings.
“This
has enormous impacts, on our health and on our wallets,” Yeb Sano,
executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia, said in a statement
released with the figures. “In addition to human lives lost,
there’s an estimated cost of $225 billion in lost labor, and
trillions in medical costs.”
India,
the world’s fastest-growing major economy, makes up 22 of the top
30 most polluted cities, with five in China, two in Pakistan and one
in Bangladesh. India racks up health-care costs and productivity
losses from pollution of as much as 8.5 percent of gross domestic
product, according to the World Bank.
China
made marked progress in its usually dismal pollution levels, with
average concentrations falling by 12 percent in 2018 from the
previous year, according to the data. That should help the message
President Xi Jinping will share with political party leaders on
progress across three so-called “critical battles” during the
National People’s Congress meetings that start this week.
Sano
traced much of the problematic readings back to climate change. He
noted that burning fossil fuels is both the key driver of climate
change and of air pollution worldwide, and that shifting atmospheric
conditions have worsened air quality and amplified forest fires.
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