Back to Search Start Over

A global review of the state of the evidence of household air pollution's contribution to ambient fine particulate matter and their related health impacts

Authors :
Sourangsu Chowdhury
Ajay Pillarisetti
Alicia Oberholzer
James Jetter
John Mitchell
Eva Cappuccilli
Borgar Aamaas
Kristin Aunan
Andrea Pozzer
Donee Alexander
Source :
Environment International, Vol 173, Iss , Pp 107835- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Direct exposure to household fine particulate air pollution (HAP) associated with inefficient combustion of fuels (wood, charcoal, coal, crop residues, kerosene, etc.) for cooking, space-heating, and lighting is estimated to result in 2.3 (1.6–3.1) million premature yearly deaths globally. HAP emitted indoors escapes outdoors and is a leading source of outdoor ambient fine particulate air pollution (AAP) in low- and middle-income countries, often being a larger contributor than well-recognized sources including road transport, industry, coal-fired power plants, brick kilns, and construction dust. We review published scientific studies that model the contribution of HAP to AAP at global and major sub-regional scales. We describe strengths and limitations of the current state of knowledge on HAP’s contribution to AAP and the related impact on public health and provide recommendations to improve these estimates. We find that HAP is a dominant source of ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) globally — regardless of variations in model types, configurations, and emission inventories used — that contributes approximately 20 % of total global PM2.5 exposure. There are large regional variations: in South Asia, HAP contributes ∼ 30 % of ambient PM2.5, while in high-income North America the fraction is ∼ 7 %. The median estimate indicates that the household contribution to ambient air pollution results in a substantial premature mortality burden globally of about 0.77(0.54–1) million excess deaths, in addition to the 2.3 (1.6–3.1) million deaths from direct HAP exposure. Coordinated global action is required to avert this burden.

Subjects

Subjects :
Environmental sciences
GE1-350

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01604120
Volume :
173
Issue :
107835-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environment International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4b0f17ef5e9b47dc9366b53c291b3266
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2023.107835