Wood fires and diesel cars pose
pollution threat
Air pollution is dangerously high
across many parts of Europe, resulting in premature deaths, ill health and huge
economic losses linked to reduced crop yields, Europe’s environmental watchdog
said on Tuesday.
While
emissions of some pollutants have declined sharply in Europe in recent decades,
more diesel cars and a rise in wood burning by households as a cheap
alternative to gas mean other types of harmful pollution are receding more
slowly.
European
regulators are expected to propose a tightening of EU limits on microscopic
particles known as particulate matter (PM) and other pollutants, with
legislative proposals due before the end of the year.
A
total of 22 European countries including France, Italy and Poland exceeded the
daily EU limit value for PM in 2011, while stricter, non-binding guideline
limits set by the World Health Organization (WHO) were exceeded at most monitoring
stations across continental Europe, according to a report by the European
Environment Agency (EEA).
In
the last decade, tighter European regulations on power stations and other
sources of pollution have seen a 50 percent cut in emissions of sulphur
dioxide, which causes acid rain, while carbon monoxide emissions have fallen by
a third.
By
contrast, the amount of harmful particles and ozone in the air has fallen only
slightly. Combined with recent WHO findings that lower concentrations of air
pollution can be more harmful than previously thought, pressure is building on
the European Union to do more.
“Air
pollution is causing damage to human health and ecosystems. Large parts of the
population do not live in a healthy environment, according to current
standards,” said Hans Bruyninckx, Executive Director of the Copenhagen-based
EEA.
The
tighter proposed limits on PM could pose problems for EU governments, many of
which have struggled to meet the existing limits in force since 2010, resulting
in up to a third of Europeans being exposed to dangerous levels of PM
pollution.
In
its report, the EEA said PM pollution - particularly in urban areas - posed the
greatest risk to human health thanks to its ability to pass directly from the
lungs into the bloodstream.
Despite
struggling to meet the limits, cities in Europe - along with the Americas -
enjoy relatively low average PM pollution levels compared with those in
southeast Asia, the Middle East and Africa, WHO data showed.
Ground-level
ozone pollution - formed indirectly by a combination of sunlight and mixtures
of other pollutants in the atmosphere - inflicts huge damage on EU crop
production, particularly in Mediterranean countries such as Italy, France and
Spain.
It
has been estimated that ozone pollution resulted in production losses of 27
million tonnes of grain in Europe in 2000.
The
increasing number of diesel vehicles on Europe’s roads, particularly newer
models, are a major source of nitrogen dioxide, one of the main precursor
pollutants that form ozone, the report says.
That
is because while modern diesel exhaust after-treatment systems reduce fine
particle and other emissions, they increase direct nitrogen dioxide emissions.
Researchers
said earlier this month that nitrogen dioxide emissions from diesel exhausts
can disrupt honeybees’ ability to recognise the smell of flowers, which could
affect pollination and further undermine food production.
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