Pathways for India to Reduce Ambient Air Pollution Health Burden and Achieve the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG-3.4)

被引:0
|
作者
Sarkar, Debajit [1 ]
Imam, Fahad [1 ]
Kumar, Alok [1 ]
Mukherjee, Akash [2 ]
Purohit, Pallav [3 ]
Kiesewetter, Gregor [3 ]
Klimont, Zbigniew [3 ]
Ghosh, Santu [4 ]
Balakrishnan, Kalpana [5 ]
Chowdhury, Sourangsu [6 ]
Dey, Sagnik [1 ,7 ,8 ]
机构
[1] Indian Inst Technol Delhi, Ctr Atmospher Sci, Delhi 110016, India
[2] Indian Inst Technol Delhi, Sch Interdisciplinary Res, Delhi 110016, India
[3] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria
[4] St Johns Med Coll, Bangalore 560034, India
[5] Sri Ramachandra Inst Higher Educ & Res, Chennai 600016, India
[6] CICERO, Ctr Int Climate Res, N-0318 Oslo, Norway
[7] Korea Univ, Adjunct Fac, Seoul 02841, South Korea
[8] Indian Inst Technol Delhi, Ctr Excellence Res Clean Air, Delhi 110016, India
关键词
non-communicable disease; sustainable developmentgoal; GAINS model; mortality; India; MORTALITY; QUALITY; DISEASE;
D O I
10.1021/acs.est.4c08697
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Sustainable Development Goal 3.4 (SDG-3.4) aims to reduce non-communicable disease (NCD) mortality by one-third by 2030, compared to 2015 levels. First, we examined whether the National Clean Air Program (NCAP) is sufficient to allow India to achieve this target. Subsequently, we integrated GAINS-simulated sector-specific PM2.5 concentrations across three pathways-business-as-usual (BAU), advanced control technology (ACT), and sustainable development scenario (SDS)-with the Global Burden of Disease framework to assess potential health benefits for 2030 at a subnational scale and evaluate the feasibility of accomplishing SDG-3.4. In 2015, ambient PM2.5 attributable premature deaths were 0.72 million (95& UIs: 0.53-0.89), and an aggregated 0.12 million (0.08-0.16) deaths could be prevented if the NCAP target is met by 2026. However, states could reduce 3.6-10.8% of targeted NCD mortality by 2030 with a lagged 40% reduction in PM2.5 levels relative to the baseline. PM2.5-attributable deaths would change to 0.79 million (0.57-1.1), 0.76 million (0.6-1.1), and 0.63 million (0.48-0.81) in 2030 under the BAU, ACT, and SDS pathways, respectively. Implementing stringent emission controls through policy and technological interventions, primarily focusing on household and energy sectors, would reduce NCD mortality by 5-13% across subregions. Simultaneously controlling other risk factors would accelerate India's journey toward achieving SDG-3.4.
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页码:4765 / 4777
页数:13
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