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March 13, 2018

Research shows China’s war on pollution will give some people an extra five years of life

Quartz quotes EPIC's report on the association between air quality and life expectancy.
By
Echo Huang

In 2014, China’s premier Li Keqiang declared war on air pollution. With many cities routinely experiencing an ”airpocalypse,” it was long overdue. At one point in 2013, a children’s hospital in Beijing was treating 7,000-plus patients a day for respiratory ailments. Researchers found that people’s lifespans could be shortened by more than five years in areas that relied heavily on coal, a major contributor of deadly air pollutants.

Four years later, China has made significant progress on fighting air pollution.

The nation’s air quality has improved so significantly in recent years that citizens can expect to see their lifespan increase by 2.4 years (pdf, p. 2) relative to 2013 levels, according to a report published yesterday (March 12) by the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago.

Continue reading at Quartz…