• Climate
    • Climate Change
    • Extreme Weather
    • Mitigation
    • Natural Phenomena
  • Green Living
    • Buildings
    • Farming
    • Food and Drink
    • Holidays
    • Home & Garden
    • Natural Health
    • Personal Journey
    • Shopping
  • Resources
    • Finance
    • Water
      • Fresh Water
      • Oceans
    • Energy
    • Trees
    • Waste
      • Composting
      • Pollution
      • Recycling
      • Reduction
      • Repurpose
      • Reuse
  • Biodiversity
    • Air
    • Water
    • Land
  • Innovation
    • Creativity
    • Design
      • Green Building
    • Science
  • Community
    • Civil Society Work
    • Climate Express
    • Eco Communities
    • Faith communities
    • Gatherings
      • Awards
      • Conferences
      • Expo
    • Green Jobs
    • Vulnerable People
  • Responsibility
    • Calls to Action
    • Business
      • Corporate
      • SME’s
    • Governance
      • Cities & Towns
      • Governments
      • Policy Development
    • Individual
  • Training
    • Books
    • Courses
    • DVD’s & Films
    • Youth
      • Bursaries
      • Challenges
      • Competitions
      • Internships
      • Mentorships
      • Schools

The Green Times

Climate change is the most widespread & complex problem humanity has ever faced! There is no time to waste and we need to turn green talk into profound green action. This is the intention of the GREEN TIMES.

You are here: Home / Articles / Nearly a quarter of all human deaths caused by pollution

Nearly a quarter of all human deaths caused by pollution

March 31, 2016 Leave a Comment

A child scavenges for coal scraps in a slum in Manila. One in four children’s deaths around the world are caused by unhealthy environments, the WHO has found. Image: Adam Cohn/flickr/cc.

Nearly a quarter of all deaths around the world are caused by living and working in toxic and polluted environments, and the worst affected are children, the poor, and the elderly, a new report released on Tuesday by the World Health Organization (WHO) has found.

“If countries do not take actions to make environments where people live and work healthy, millions will continue to become ill and die too young,” said Dr. Margaret Chan, the WHO director-general, according to Business Insider.

The report, which surveyed global causes of deaths in 2012, found that a startling 12.6 million deaths that year could be attributed to toxic environments. The causes ranged from air, water, and soil contamination to climate change.

1.7 million children under 5 died of environmental causes

Children under five accounted for 1.7 million of those deaths—a shocking 26 percent of children’s deaths worldwide. The report found that the deaths of 4.9 million adults aged 50 to 75, the other age group most affected, were caused by the environments in which they worked and lived.

Most of these deaths are “attributable to air pollution,” the WHO stated. Air pollution alone accounts for 8.2 million annual global deaths, or about two-thirds of the total. The number of deaths from infectious diseases linked to poor water and waste management have declined since the last report a decade ago, the organization noted.

A smoggy day in Tianjin, China. Image: Rich Luhr/flickr/cc.

 

“Stroke was found to be the world’s biggest killer in terms of environmental-related deaths,” the Independent observed, “claiming the lives of 2.5 million people each year. This was followed by heart disease, which killed 2.3 million people.”

The largest number of environmentally-caused deaths were in the Western Pacific and Southeast Asia regions, which alone accounted for 7.3 million annual deaths from environmental causes.

Clean technologies and fuels, safe water and sanitation needed

The report suggests several solutions to address the crisis. “Using clean technologies and fuels for domestic cooking, heating and lighting,” the WHO stated, “would reduce acute respiratory infections, chronic respiratory diseases, cardiovascular diseases and burns. Increasing access to safe water and adequate sanitation and promoting hand washing would further reduce diarrheal diseases.”

But crucially, the organization argues, efforts to combat this public health catastrophe must also tackle large-scale environmental polluters. “Actions by sectors such as energy, transport, agriculture and industry are vital,” the report notes, “in cooperation with the health sector, to address the root environmental causes of ill health… actions do not need to come from health alone, but rather from all sectors making decisions which [have an] impact on environmental determinants of health.”

By Nika Knight. Source: Common Dreams

More that you may like:

Only a fraction of plastics recycled in SA
David Barnard beats Last Desert Race for solar energy
World will pass crucial 2C global warming limit, experts warn
This Earth Hour, shine a light on climate action

Share this:

  • Google
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • More
  • Email
  • Print
  • Pinterest

Leave a Reply or Follow Cancel reply

Welcome to SA\s green news portal
JOIN OUR MONTHLY NEWSFEED
Like our work? Please help Subscribe-now
  • ECO DIRECTORY
    • Accommodation
    • Animals
    • Building
    • Cleaning
    • Clothing
    • Cosmetics
    • Electronics
    • Energy
      • Saving
      • Solar
    • Financial Services
    • Food/Farming
    • Gardening
    • Government
    • Health
    • Office
    • Publications
    • Restaurants
    • Supermarkets
    • Training
    • Transport
    • Trees
    • Waste
      • Composting
      • Recycling
    • Water
    • Web Services

Upcoming Events

  1. Human, nature and the Ecstatic: an Art and Creativity Experience

    April 23 @ 7:00 pm - April 27 @ 5:00 pm
  2. African Utility Week 2016

    May 17 @ 8:00 am - May 20 @ 5:00 pm
  3. International March Against Monsanto

    May 21 @ 8:00 am - 5:00 pm
  4. Sustainability Week 2016

    May 31 @ 8:00 am - June 2 @ 5:00 pm
  5. Earth Expo 2016

    August 11 @ 9:00 am - August 14 @ 6:00 pm

View All Events

Topics

Africa agriculture animals awards Cape Town carbon emissions children climate change community conference conservation drought economy education energy environment Eskom extreme weather farming food fracking global warming government Greenpeace health ocean oceans organic petco plastic poaching protect protests Recycling renewable energy research rhino science solar energy sustainability united nations waste Water wildlife youth

RSS Feed & Email Subscriptions

The Green Times
The Green Times» Biodiversity
The Green Times» Climate
The Green Times» Community
The Green Times» Governance
The Green Times» Innovation
The Green Times» Mitigation
The Green Times» Resources
The Green Times» Responsibility
The Green Times» Training
The Green Times» Youth
2012-giving-thanks-for-environmental-wins
CONTRIBUTE HERE
Do you like what we do? Would you like to help keep this work afloat with a small monthly contribution? Join as a member and let's do it together.
nedbank-plays-pivotal-role-in-sas-first-green-bond
BECOME A SPONSOR
Doing good is good for business. We rely on corporate CSI and philanthropic support to drive sustainability mainstream, where it belongs.
  • ABOUT GREEN TIMES
    • Our Ethos
    • Our Intention
    • Contributors
  • Support
    • Editorial
    • Sales
    • Contributions
  • Journalist Training
  • Feedback from Our Clients
  • Newsfeed Archive
JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORKS
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
JOIN OUR MONTHLY NEWSFEED
Like our work? Please help Subscribe-now

Return to Top of Page · Copyright © 2011–2016 All rights reserved · GREEN TIMES +2721 855 0518 · Design & Admin - ARACHNE DESIGN ·

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.