Air pollution from fossil
fuels costs $8 billion per day
Elisheva
Mittelman,
Yale University’s E360 DIGEST
The
economic and health costs of air pollution from burning fossil fuels totaled
$2.9 trillion in 2018, calculated in the form of work absences, years of life
lost, and premature deaths, according to a new report by the Center for
Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA).
The cost represents 3.3 percent of global GDP, or about $8 billion per day.
The cost represents 3.3 percent of global GDP, or about $8 billion per day.
“Air
pollution is a threat to our health and our economies,” Minwoo Son, a clean air
campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia, which commissioned the report, said in a
statement.
“Every year, air pollution from fossil fuels takes millions of lives, increases our risk of stroke, lung cancer, and asthma, and costs us trillions of dollars.”
“Every year, air pollution from fossil fuels takes millions of lives, increases our risk of stroke, lung cancer, and asthma, and costs us trillions of dollars.”
The
study, the first of its kind to quantify the global impacts of air pollution
caused by burning fossil fuels, focused on the health impacts of three specific
types of pollutants: Nitrogen dioxide, ozone, and fine particulate matter,
which has the greater impact, causing about 1.8 billion days of missed work due
to disease and $2.2 trillion in air pollution costs every year.
Nitrogen dioxide and ozone pollution cost $351 billion and $380 billion, respectively. Together, air pollution from these three pollutants is responsible for 4.5 million premature deaths around the world each year, the study said.
Nitrogen dioxide and ozone pollution cost $351 billion and $380 billion, respectively. Together, air pollution from these three pollutants is responsible for 4.5 million premature deaths around the world each year, the study said.
The analysis also included a regional breakdown of air pollution impacts. The researchers found that the most premature deaths from fossil fuel-related air pollution in 2018 were in mainland China (1.8 million), India (1 million), and the United States (230,000). As a result, those three countries also faced the highest annual costs: $900 billion in China, $600 billion in the U.S., and $150 billion in India.
The
report also highlights several key solutions to reduce air pollution, improve
public health, and mitigate climate change. “This is a problem that we know how
to solve by transitioning to renewable energy sources, phasing out diesel and
petrol cars, and building public transport,” Son said. “We need to take into account
the real cost of fossil fuels, not just for our rapidly heating planet, but
also for our health.”