City
Epaper

Delhi had highest per-capita economic loss due to air pollution in 2019: Lancet

By IANS | Updated: December 22, 2020 14:35 IST

New Delhi, Dec 22 Air pollution woes have quadrupled for Delhi, as the state suffered the highest per-capita ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Dec 22 Air pollution woes have quadrupled for Delhi, as the state suffered the highest per-capita economic loss due to air pollution last year, a study in the peer-reviewed medical journal Lancet suggests.

For years, northern India especially New Delhi has been battling critical levels of air pollution, which have remained consistently in the hazardous mark, for many days at a stretch, during winters. This air pollution has already taken a big toll on the health of the citizens and rattled the government, forcing it to devise new governance mechanism to address the menace of pollution in the capital.

The study said the economic loss due to lost output from premature deaths and morbidity from air pollution was 1.36 per cent of the GDP in India in 2019. In Delhi, the loss due to lost output from premature deaths and illness attributable to air pollution as a percentage of state GDP was 1.06 per cent.

Uttar Pradesh recorded highest loss to GDP at 1.34 per cent followed by Punjab at 1.22 per cent. "Delhi had the highest per-capita economic loss due to air pollution, followed by Haryana in 2019, with 5.4 times variation across all states," said the findings.

According to the study, the economic loss per capita was highest in Delhi, which was to the tune of $62.0 followed by neighbouring Haryana at $53.8.

The study's findings suggested that 1.67 million deaths were attributable to air pollution in India in 2019, accounting for 17.8 per cent of the total deaths in the country.

The crude death rate per 100,000 population due to household air pollution decreased in India by 64.2 per cent from 1990 to 2019, due to reduced use of solid fuels, while that due to ambient particulate matter pollution increased by 115.3 per cent and that due to ambient ozone pollution increased by 139.2 per cent.

"The death rate due to household air pollution decreased by 64.2%

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyIndia turns focus to mega infrastructure push after GST overhaul

EntertainmentDirector Raghav Khanna, cricketer Unmukt Chand share insights on 'Unbroken: The Unmukt Chand Story' documentary

BusinessIndia turns focus to mega infrastructure push after GST overhaul

BusinessAir India and Air Astana enter codeshare partnership to offer more flight options to travellers

BusinessMumbai redevelopment project to unlock over 44,000 new homes: Report

Health Realted Stories

HealthNovo Nordisk to layoff 11 pc of global workforce, save $1.3 billion by 2026 end

HealthChina's youth under stress as unemployment soars to 11-month high

HealthGujarat has adequate health centres as per 2024-25 norms: Health Minister

HealthAustralia approves world-first vaccine to save koalas from chlamydia

HealthSC clears doctor of medical negligence in delivery death case