Fuente: MIT News
 Expuesto el: viernes, 20 de abril de 2012 5:00
 Autor: MIT News
 Asunto: New study links air pollution and early death in the U.K.
| A map plots the   distribution of combustion emissions that have migrated into the United Kingdom   from the rest of Europe. Higher concentrations, in red, can be found on the   outskirts of the country. In a   study appearing   this month in the journal Environmental   Science and Technology, MIT researchers report that emissions   from cars, trucks, planes and powerplants cause 13,000 premature deaths in the   United Kingdom each year. The researchers analyzed   data from 2005, the most recent year for which information is available. They   found that among the various sources of emissions in the country, car and   truck exhaust was the single greatest contributor to premature death,   affecting some 3,300 people per year. By comparison, the researchers note,   fewer than 3,000 Britons died in road accidents in 2005. The researchers found   that emissions originating elsewhere in Europe cause an additional 6,000   early deaths in the U.K. annually; U.K. emissions that migrate outside the   country, in turn, cause 3,100 premature deaths per year in other European   Union nations. In some areas on the periphery of the U.K. — such as northern   Scotland — almost all air pollution comes from the rest of Europe, the   researchers say. MIT’s Steven Barrett and   his co-author Steve Yim began the study in light of recent events in the   U.K.: London is currently in violation of air quality standards set by the   E.U., and the British government may face significant E.U. fines if it fails   to address its air pollution. “We wanted to know if the   responsibility to maintain air quality was matched by an ability to act or do   something about it,” says Barrett, the Charles Stark Draper Assistant   Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT. “The results of the study   indicate there is an asymmetry there.” Dust in the wind Barrett worked with MIT   postdoc Steve Yim to analyze emissions data provided by the British   government. The team divided the country’s emissions into sectors, including   road transport; power generation; commercial, residential and agricultural   sources; and other transport, such as shipping and aviation. The group then simulated   temperature and wind fields throughout the country using a weather research   and forecasting model similar to those used to predict short-term weather.   Barrett and Yim entered emissions data into the model to see how weather   might disperse the emissions. They then ran another simulation — a chemistry   transport model — to see how emissions from different sectors interacted. Finally, the group   overlaid their simulation results on population density maps to see which   locations had the greatest long-term exposure to combustion emissions.   Barrett observed that most of the emissions studied were composed of   particles less than 2.5 microns in diameter, a size that epidemiologists have   associated with premature death. Hazy outlook After road transport, the   researchers found that emissions from shipping and aviation were the second   greatest contributor to premature deaths, causing 1,800 early deaths   annually, followed by powerplant emissions, which cause an estimated 1,700   premature deaths each year. Barrett and Yim found that   powerplant emissions have larger health impacts in northern England, where   emissions from five major plants tend to congregate. In London, the   researchers found that shipping and aviation emissions had a greater impact   on health, possibly due to the proximity of major airports to the city. Emissions from the   country’s powerplants, which are mostly northeast of major cities and emit   pollution well above ground level, are less damaging to the general   population than other sources of pollution, Barrett says. In contrast, he   says emissions from cars and trucks, which occur closer to where people live   and work, pose a more serious risk to human health.  “People have a number of   risk factors in their life,” Barrett says. “Air pollution is another risk   factor. And it can be significant, especially for people who live in cities.” Fintan Hurley, scientific   director of the Institute of Occupational Medicine in Edinburgh, Scotland,   says the group’s findings provide a detailed analysis of the sources of air   pollution in the country. Hurley led a similar study by the Committee on the   Medical Effects of Air Pollution, and says Barrett’s results are in line with   that analysis. The implications, he adds, go beyond Britain’s borders. “It’s helpful to have a   detailed analysis of effects in the U.K., but outdoor air pollution from   combustion sources is an important public health issue worldwide,” Hurley   says. “With outdoor air pollution everybody is exposed, because fine   particles and gases also penetrate indoors. It’s possible for individuals to   do some things to limit their personal exposures, but the main need is to act   together to reduce emissions.” The study was funded by   the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council.  
 | 
 



