PARIS – Lung-penetrating dust from coal-fired power plants in the European Union claims some 23,000 lives a year and racks up tens of billions of Euros in healthcare costs, an NGO report, titled “Europe’s dark cloud: How coal-burning countries make their neighbours sick”, revealed on Tuesday. The study was compiled by researchers from four green energy lobby groups: the Health and Environment Alliance, the Worldwide Fund for Nature, the Climate Action Network Europe and Sandbag.
Even though the EU is shifting towards renewable sources like wind and solar energy, coal still accounted for 18 percent of the blocs greenhouse gas emissions in 2014 and a quarter of its electricity mix in 2015, said the report.
Emissions from 257 power plants for which data was available “were associated with 22,900 premature deaths in 2013,” said the report.
There are a total of 280 coal-fired plants in the EU.
In addition to deaths, the report blamed coal plant pollution for nearly 12,000 new cases of chronic bronchitis and more than half-a-million asthma attacks in children in 2013.
The cost of medical treatment required, as well as reduced productivity caused by employee absences from work, amounted to total losses ranging between 32.4 billion to 62.3 billion euros ($36 billion to $70 billion), said the report.
About 83 percent of deaths, some 19,000 in total, were blamed on inhalation of fine particulate matter – air-borne articles under 2.5 micrometres in diameter which can enter deep into the lungs and bloodstream.
“Most common causes of death connected to particulate matter exposure are strokes, heart disease, chronic lung disease or lung cancer,” said the report.
It warned that the particles “are transported hundreds of kilometers and across national borders, impacting the health of people both within the country of production and further afield.”
The report listed the EU’s worst offenders, attributing 4,690 premature deaths to coal power stations in Poland, 2,490 to Germany, 1,660 to Romania, 1,390 to Bulgaria and 1,350 to Britain.
The five countries most affected by homegrown and foreign pollution were reported as Germany with 3,630 deaths, Italy with 1,610, France with 1,380, Greece with 1,050, and Hungary with 700.
“Air pollution is responsible for millions of deaths worldwide,” Roberto Bertollini, the World Health Organization (WHO) representative to the EU said in a statement.
“Higher temperatures from climate change will exacerbate the problem,” said the report.
Earlier, a similar study in the United States had attributed more than 13,000 premature deaths to coal pollution, while Indian research has blamed as many as 115,000 premature deaths and 20 million asthma cases per year on coal pollution.
In Paris last December 195 nations agreed to curb climate-altering greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas in a bid to limit global warming to “well below” two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) from pre-industrial levels.