INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
92 per cent of Asia and the Pacific's population is exposed to high-levels of air pollution
cost-effective measures are implemented, a new UN report said on Tuesday.Currently, about four billion people -- 92 per cent of Asia and the
Pacific's population -- are exposed to levels of air pollution that pose a significant risk to their health.The report titled "Air pollution
in Asia and the Pacific: Science-based solutions" was launched at the World Health Organisation's first Global Conference on Air Pollution
and Health here.It is the first comprehensive scientific assessment of the air pollution outlook in Asia and the Pacific and is a
collaboration between the UN Environment Programme (UN Environment), the Asia Pacific Clean Air Partnership, and the Climate and Clean Air
Coalition.The report details 25 policy and technological measures that will deliver benefits across sectors.The analysis takes the region's
considerable diversity into account and groups the selected measures into three categories.The first is conventional emission controls
focusing on emissions that lead to the formation of fine particulate matter (PM2.5).The second is next-stage air-quality measures for
reducing emissions that lead to the formation of PM2.5.This includes activities like reducing the burning of agricultural and municipal
solid waste and preventing forest fires.The third is measures contributing to development priority goals with benefits for air quality.This
includes activities like providing clean energy for households, improving public transport and promoting the use of electric
vehicles.According to the report, effectively implementing the 25 measures would result in a 20 per cent reduction in carbon dioxide and a
45 per cent reduction in methane emissions, preventing up to a third of a degree Celsius in global warming.Two-thirds of these deaths occur
in the Asia-Pacific region
The reductions in outdoor air pollution from the 25 measures could reduce premature mortality in the region by one third, and help avoid
about two million premature deaths from indoor air pollution."It is an unfortunate fact that breathing clean air, the most basic of human
needs, has become a luxury in many parts of the world
But there are numerous tried and tested solutions that we can put in place now to solve this problem," UN Environment head Erik Solheim