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This Article is From Apr 03, 2019

Over 12 Lakh Early Deaths In India Due To Air Pollution, Says Report  

Over 12 Lakh Early Deaths In India Due To Air Pollution, Says Report  
A man wearing a face mask cycles along a road in Delhi, India. (Photographer: Ruhani Kaur/Bloomberg)

Over 1.2 million (12 lakh) people died in India due to air pollution in 2017, said a global report.

As per the State of Global Air 2019, overall long-term exposure to outdoor and indoor air pollution contributed to nearly 5 million (50 lakh) deaths from stroke, diabetes, heart attack, lung cancer, and chronic lung disease in 2017.

Out of these, 3 million (30 lakh) deaths are directly attributed to PM 2.5. The analysis found that China and India together were responsible for over half of the total global attributable deaths, with each country facing over 1.2 million (12 lakh) deaths from all air pollution in 2017.

The report, released by U.S.-based Health Effects Institute, said air pollution is the third highest cause of death among all health risks in India, ranking just above smoking.

As per the report, the life of a South Asian child born today will be shortened by two years and six months growing up in current high levels of air pollution, while the global life expectancy loss is 20 months.

The institute said schemes initiated by the Indian government to address pollution like the Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana, household LPG program, accelerated Bharat Stage-VI clean vehicle standards, and the new national clean air programme can have significant health benefits in the coming years.

These and future initiatives have the potential, if fully implemented as part of a sustained commitment to air quality, to result in significant health benefits in coming years, said Robert O'Keefe, vice president, Health Effects Institute.

Worldwide, air pollution is responsible for more deaths than many better-known risk factors such as malnutrition, alcohol use, and physical inactivity, said the report.

Each year, more people globally die from air pollution-related disease than from road traffic injuries or malaria, the study said.

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