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Interplay of Climate Change and Air Pollution- Projection of the under-5 mortality attributable to ambient particulate matter (PM2.5) in South Asia.

Authors :
Anita, Wahida Musarrat
Uttajug, Athicha
Seposo, Xerxes Tesoro
Sudo, Kengo
Nakata, Makiko
Takemura, Toshihiko
Takano, Hirohisa
Fujiwara, Taku
Ueda, Kayo
Source :
Environmental Research. May2024, Vol. 248, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution is a leading health risk factor for children under- 5 years, especially in developing countries. South Asia is a PM 2.5 hotspot, where climate change, a potential factor affecting PM2.5 pollution, adds a major challenge. However, limited evidence is available on under-5 mortality attributable to PM2.5 under different climate change scenarios. This study aimed to project under-5 mortality attributable to long-term exposure to ambient PM 2.5 u nder seven air pollution and climate change mitigation scenarios in South Asia. We used a concentration-risk function obtained from a previous review to project under-5 mortality attributable to ambient PM 2.5. With a theoretical minimum risk exposure level of 2.4 μg/m3, this risk function was linked to gridded annual PM2.5 concentrations from atmospheric modeling to project under-5 mortality from 2010 to 2049 under different climate change mitigation scenarios. The scenarios were developed from the Aim/Endues global model based on end-of-pipe (removing the emission of air pollutants at the source, EoP) and 2 °C target measures. Our results showed that, in 2010–2014, about 306.8 thousand under-5 deaths attributable to PM 2.5 occurred in South Asia under the Reference (business as usual) scenario. The number of deaths was projected to increase in 2045–2049 by 36.6% under the same scenario and 7.7% under the scenario where EoP measures would be partially implemented by developing countries (EoPmid), and was projected to decrease under other scenarios, with the most significant decrease (81.2%) under the scenario where EoP measures would be fully enhanced by all countries along with the measures to achieve 2 °C target (EoPmaxCCSBLD) across South Asia. Country-specific projections of under-5 mortality varied by country. The current emission control strategy would not be sufficient to reduce the number of deaths in South Asia. Robust climate change mitigation and air pollution control policy implementation is required. • Exposure to high PM2.5 concentration would increase under-5 mortality in South Asia. • This would aggravate in future in the context of global climate change. • Current air pollution control measures are not enough to reduce under-5 mortality. • Robust mitigation policies are required to reduce the burden of under-5 mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00139351
Volume :
248
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Environmental Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176612092
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2024.118292