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WB says air pollution alone costs 3.8% of China’s GDP
CHENGDU—Air pollution is
costing China 3.8 percent of its gross domestic product, causing more
diseases and claiming more lives, the World Bank has warned.
While it has put the combined health and non-health cost of outdoor air
and water pollution for China’s economy at around 100 billion U.S.
dollars a year, or about 5.8 percent of the country’s GDP, David Dollar,
the World Bank country director for China and Mongolia, said air
pollution poses higher costs than water pollution.
Air pollution, especially in large cities, is leading to higher
incidence of lung diseases, including cancer, respiratory system
problems and therefore higher levels of work and school absenteeism,
Dollar said, quoting a World Bank report issued following a joint
assessment with China’s State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA).
He pointed to particulate matter, which measures less than 10 microns in
diameter, as a major threat to health. The density of particulate matter
in north China averages 112 microgrammes and that in the south, 88
microgrammes, he said at a forum on China’s investment environment in
Chengdu, capital of southwest China’s Sichuan Province.
Particulate matter has also been a headache in Beijing, with density
averaging 141 microgrammes. As part of the joint study, the World Bank
and SEPA also conducted a survey in the southwestern Chongqing
Municipality, one of the worst polluted Chinese regions, and the
commercial center Shanghai, and found many citizens are willing to pay
for reduced health risks associated with environmental pollution.
Dollar said it would be a cost-effective move to reduce air pollution by
moving manufacturing plants out of city centers, replacing coal-burning
stoves with liquefied gas-fuelled heating systems, increasing state
investment in public transport and limiting use of private cars.
Despite the pollution challenges, the World Bank affirmed China’s
commitment to address the problem. China has put environment protection
as its highest priority in its 11th Five Year Plan and called for a
“resource saving society”.—Xinhua |