State of Global Air 2019, the third edition of HEI’s flagship report and website with global data on air quality and its health impact, was released spring of 2019.
The State of Global Air website provides both air quality and health-impact data by country and region, based on the most recent data available from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation’s Global Burden of Disease (GBD) project. The site offers exposure and health data for ambient particulate matter, ozone, and household air pollution, and also estimates the total health burden from all three forms of air pollution.
For the first time, State of Global Air 2019 also provides worldwide estimates of lower life expectancy that can be attributed to air pollution. These estimates were based on a global analysis conducted by Joshua Apte of the University of Texas at Austin and his colleagues.
Here are key findings in the 2019 report:
- Air pollution (PM2.5, ozone, and household air pollution) is the fifth leading risk factor for mortality worldwide. In 2017, air pollution is estimated to have contributed to close to 5 million deaths globally — nearly 1 in every 10 deaths.
- Air pollution contributes to more deaths than many better-known risk factors such as malnutrition, alcohol use, and physical inactivity.
- Air pollution reduced life expectancy in 2017 by 1 year and 8 months on average worldwide.
- In China, PM2.5 pollution has dropped markedly in recent years, but concentrations still exceed the World Health Organization’s least-stringent target.
- Nearly half the world’s population — 3.6 billion people — were exposed to household air pollution in 2017. There has been progress: the proportion of people cooking with solid fuels declined from about 64% in 2005 to 47%