Indians could live longer if air quality improves, says study

Indians could live longer if air quality improves, says study

New Delhi, September 12 : If Delhi’s foul air is cleaned up and made to meet the World Health Organisation standards, city residents stand to gain nine years in average in their life span, a study has said. The Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) developed by the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago (EPIC), when considered at the national level, says Indians could live four years longer in average if its air quality meets WHO standards.
The study takes airborne particulate matter pollution, PM 2.5, into account and extrapolates it to see what impact any reduction in its volume would have on the lifespan of people. Accordingly, it says that if PM 2.5 quantity in Delhi’s air meets the WHO annual standard of 10 micrograms per cubic metre (ug/m3), people can live up to nine years longer and six years longer if it meets the national standard of 40 ug/m3. Products of vehicular and industrial combustion, PM 2.5 are air borne ultra fine particulates, measuring less than 2.5 microns, which can cause irreparable harm to humans by entering the respiratory system and subsequently the bloodstream. “The AQLI reveals that if India reduced its air pollution to comply with the WHO’s air quality standard, its people could live about four years longer on average, or a combined more than 4.7 billion life years.

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