Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Air Pollution Results In 7,700 Premature Deaths In Canada Each Year: Report

The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2017 12:41 PM
    OTTAWA — Air pollution cost Canadian families an estimated $36 billion in 2015 due to premature death and illness, a new research report says.
     
    The report, Costs of Pollution in Canada, is a compilation of scientific data on all aspects of pollution, from smog to oil spills and fertilizer use. It is being released today by the International Institute for Sustainable Development.
     
    "The more scientists look at the costs of air pollution, the more they find those costs are large," said Robert Smith, a senior associate at the institute and the report's lead author.
     
    A 2008 Canadian Medical Association study concluded that about 1,500 people die prematurely every year because of air pollution — a study once considered the gold standard, Smith said.
     
    More recently, that study was found to have vastly underestimated the impact; new research in 2015 suggested the number of premature deaths caused by air pollution is closer to 7,700 people a year.
     
    "We now know the costs of air pollution are much higher than we thought they were," Smith said. "The morbidity and mortality is much worse than we thought."
     
    The IISD report compiles scientific research on the impacts of pollution across a number of areas, including human and animal health and costs to business and government. It includes things such as the cost to clean up contaminated sites, the impact of acid rain, the deaths of honey bees, algae blooms and oil spills.
     
     
    A lot of the costs of pollution are not known at all because the research simply isn't there, the report notes.
     
    Pathogens in tap water add another $895 million in costs. Climate change-related heat waves cost $1.6 billion in 2015, the report says.
     
    Heat waves are the only consequence the study priced, since there is no clear picture what portion of other events such storms and droughts can be attributed to climate change, Smith said.
     
    Scientists have been able to attribute about 50 per cent of heat waves to climate change, and the $1.6 billion cost reflects that figure, he noted.
     
    While much of the world is taking steps to address air pollution largely by cutting greenhouse gas emissions, there is a fear the United States is poised to rekindle the use of coal to generate electricity.
     
    President Donald Trump has famously promised to breathe new life into the struggling U.S. coal industry, which used to be responsible for more than half of America's power, and now produces about one-third.
     
    Regulations on coal-fired plants have put a damper on coal production, as have market forces that made other sources more attractive, such as natural gas from fracking. Burning coal remains the largest source of air pollution in the U.S.
     
    As Trump now ponders withdrawing from the Paris climate change agreement, Smith said fear of more coal has grown. Even though Canada isn't going down that road, "pollution knows no boundaries."
     
    Toronto, which has finally started to see its air pollution levels go down, would get hit if there is suddenly a ramping-up of coal production in the Ohio Valley, Smith said.
     
    In many ways, he added, the bright light these days is China, which recently shelved plans to open more than 100 new coal plants.
     
    "I guess all we can, in some sense, pin our hopes on is the Chinese population — that their rising middle class isn't going to put up with this."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Single Mom Recovering From Triple Amputation Brought On By Rare Strep Throat

    Winnipeg Single Mom Recovering From Triple Amputation Brought On By Rare Strep Throat
    WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg woman is recovering in hospital after developing a rare type of strep throat that forced doctors to amputate both her legs and one of her arms.

    Winnipeg Single Mom Recovering From Triple Amputation Brought On By Rare Strep Throat

    Three Dumped In Water Forcing Five-year-Old To Hit The Kill Switch In B.C.

    Three Dumped In Water Forcing Five-year-Old To Hit The Kill Switch In B.C.
    VICTORIA — A dramatic rescue in the waters of Cowichan Bay, B.C., ended a traumatic event for a family of four on Thursday night.

    Three Dumped In Water Forcing Five-year-Old To Hit The Kill Switch In B.C.

    New Mother Battling Flesh-eating Disease In Halifax, Out Of Coma: Family

    New Mother Battling Flesh-eating Disease In Halifax, Out Of Coma: Family
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia woman who gave birth just three weeks ago has been diagnosed with so-called flesh-eating disease and placed in an induced coma.

    New Mother Battling Flesh-eating Disease In Halifax, Out Of Coma: Family

    Nova Scotia Boy, 14, Charged With Sharing Child Pornography On Facebook

    Nova Scotia Boy, 14, Charged With Sharing Child Pornography On Facebook
    HALIFAX — A 14-year-old Nova Scotia boy has been charged with sharing child pornography on Facebook.

    Nova Scotia Boy, 14, Charged With Sharing Child Pornography On Facebook

    Calgary Woman Convicted With Husband In Son's Murder Files Appeal

    Calgary Woman Convicted With Husband In Son's Murder Files Appeal
    CALGARY — A woman found guilty of murdering her own son has filed an appeal that claims the judge showed bias by crying during the trial.

    Calgary Woman Convicted With Husband In Son's Murder Files Appeal

    Man Objects After Surname 'Grabher' Refused As Licence Plate In Nova Scotia

    Man Objects After Surname 'Grabher' Refused As Licence Plate In Nova Scotia
    HALIFAX — The Nova Scotia government has withdrawn a man's eponymous personalized licence plate, saying Lorne Grabher's surname is offensive to women.

    Man Objects After Surname 'Grabher' Refused As Licence Plate In Nova Scotia