UNEP. Photo: UNEP
This article is brought to you thanks to the strategic cooperation of The European Sting with the World Economic Forum.
Author: Ron Bills, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board, Envirofit
Just recently, the World Health Organization (WHO) revealed how many lives are impacted by air pollution. Nine out of 10 people on this planet breathe air with high levels of pollutants, resulting in seven million deaths every year. This makes air pollution our biggest environmental health risk. As the world continues to urbanize, emergent middle-class populations in China, India and elsewhere are putting new strains on our global energy resources. Easy access to energy is often the measuring stick for societal advancement. Images of smoggy cityscapes with dramatically obscured skylines offer telling visual proof of the numbers reported by the WHO. Though outdoor (ambient) air pollution is a serious issue, more than half of deaths caused were the result of household air pollution (HAP). Though HAP receives less attention than ambient air pollution, it causes more deaths than HIV, malaria and TB combined. Worldwide, three billion people lack access to modern cooking fuels such as electricity and liquified petroleum gas (LPG). Instead, they cook with biomass fuels such as wood, charcoal, dung or crop waste, over smoky fires and inefficient stoves. This is often done inside the home, and it wastes 90% of the fuel’s energy. HAP is the noxious combination of smoke, particulate matter and other emissions from this solid fuel combustion. These common cooking practices are resource-intensive and highly dangerous. They are the leading cause of global exposure to HAP, and disproportionately affect women and children.Understanding the problem
Engineering modern cooking
Author: Jahda Swanborough, Lead, Environment Initiatives, World Economic Forum
People living in energy poverty face risks to feed themselves and their families that people in high-income countries do not. This does not mean they should be denied access to clean fuels that reduce their environmental footprint and improve their health. Reducing 3.8 million deaths every year to zero is what motivates us every day. By understanding the problem, and by embracing cleaner fuels and new technologies to create long-term solutions, we can ensure fewer people are exposed to household air pollution tomorrow than were today.Discover more from The European Sting - Critical News & Insights on European Politics, Economy, Foreign Affairs, Business & Technology - europeansting.com
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