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Most surface ozone contributing to premature mortality in European countries is imported

06.03.24 | Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal)

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Exposure to current levels of ground-level ozone (O 3 ) in Europe is one of the main causes of premature mortality due to air pollution, especially in summer. A study led both by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a centre supported by the "la Caixa" Foundation , in collaboration with the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (Inserm), and the Barcelona Supercomputing Center - Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC-CNS), has quantified for the first time the impact of imported (non-national) O 3 on mortality . The results, published in Nature Medicine , have important implications for air quality and public health policies in the continent and within the European Union.

Ground-level ozone is a harmful air pollutant formed in the troposphere by the interaction of sunlight with several precursor gases , mainly nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from natural and anthropogenic sources. High O 3 levels are associated with a range of adverse respiratory health effects , including aggravation of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, lower lung function and infections, leading in the most severe cases to hospitalisation and death.

The research team quantified both national and imported O 3 contributions to mortality across 35 European countries between 2015 and 2017 , covering 813 regions and around 530 million people. The results show that imported O 3 contributed to 88.3% of all deaths attributable to this pollutant. Most of this transboundary O 3 came from outside the study domain (from hemispheric sources and transport), accounting for 56.7% of the total attributable mortality . O 3 imported from the other 34 European countries also had a significant effect on mortality, accounting for 20.9% .

The concentration of O 3 in a given location greatly depends on the tropospheric transport of the pollutant itself. “The health effects of O 3 , and of any air pollutant in general, are far from being a local issue. In this study, we found that 11.7% of deaths attributable to O 3 were caused by national sources ," says Hicham Achebak , a researcher at Inserm (France) and ISGlobal and holder of a Marie Sklodowska-Curie postdoctoral fellowship from the European Commission. "This fact underlines the need for coordinated actions at local, continental and global scales by all countries to reduce O 3 concentrations and their impact on health," adds the first author of the study.

The analysis was based on data from the warm season (May to October), which is the season of highest O 3 values. To track O 3 concentrations, the study used the CALIOPE air quality system developed at BSC-CNS, which covers Europe and surrounding areas. This system tracks both O 3 and its precursors (i.e. NOx and VOCs) that are formed or emitted in each region. To obtain data outside the study area, the researchers used a modelling approach that allowed them to track the dispersion and transport of air pollutants over long distances. The method also included emissions from both land and sea.

The average O 3 concentration over all countries and the study period was 101.9 μg/m 3 , ranging from 76.7 μg/m 3 in Finland to 130.1 μg/m 3 in Malta. The estimated number of deaths attributable to O 3 during the study period was 114,447 (estimated based on the whole range of O 3 concentrations), resulting in an attributable mortality rate of 72 deaths per million population per year .

Most industrialised and populous countries contribute most to mortality

As expected, as warmer temperatures in the south favour the formation of O 3 , the concentrations of this pollutant decrease in the north of the continent. The highest mortality burdens were estimated in the most populated countries (Germany, Italy, France, the United Kingdom, Spain and Poland), whereas the highest mortality rates were found in the south-eastern countries (Bulgaria, Serbia, Croatia, Hungary, Greece and Romania).

The analysis also showed that within Europe the most industrialised countries were the major contributors to the mortality attributable to transported transboundary O 3 , especially France , with an estimated 4,003 deaths between 2015 and 2017, and Germany , with 3,260 deaths. O 3 originating from France had a significant impact on neighbouring countries such as Luxembourg (32.3% of deaths attributable to O3), Switzerland (29.3%), Belgium (24.4%) or Spain (16.8%). O 3 from Germany also significantly affected neighbouring countries such as Luxembourg (24.2% of deaths), the Czech Republic (23.3%) or the Netherlands (21.5%).

The results highlight the importance of westerly winds, with countries downwind towards the east having a higher number of deaths attributable to imported O 3 from other European countries. South-western European countries were the least affected by the health effects of imported O 3 from other European countries . In fact, Spain, France and Portugal were the countries with the largest fraction of attributable mortality caused by national O 3 with respect to contributions from other European countries, accounting for 53.7%, 47.1% and 46.2% of deaths respectively, and the smallest imported/exported ratio of attributable deaths.

In some coastal regions and small Mediterranean countries, the contribution of shipping emissions was significant, such as Malta (24% of deaths) and Cyprus (14%).

Local, continental and global action to reduce pollution

The study underlines the need for a systematic quantification of national, EU and non-EU contributions to air pollution levels and associated health impacts as an essential step prior to the elaboration of regulation and mitigation plans , especially for air pollutants such as O 3 that are easily transported across political borders.

"Thus far, mitigation efforts have focused primarily on national and regional scales, lacking a comprehensive, transboundary assessment of the associated health effects," says Joan Ballester Claramunt , ISGlobal researcher and co-senior author of the study. "Our study is a first step towards this in-depth analysis, which would help achieve WHO air quality standards to prevent premature deaths and other health impacts such as hospitalisations and chronic diseases," he adds.

Given the large non-national contributions to average O 3 in each location, the study emphasizes that the results should not be interpreted by local air quality authorities as a justification for local inaction. "During the highest O 3 episodes the local/national contributions can increase substantially, and local mitigation actions can contribute to considerably reduce daily exceedances of the regulated thresholds. Additionally, local mitigation strategies are key towards reducing the export of O 3 to other regions and countries” argues Carlos Pérez García-Pando , ICREA and AXA Research Professor at the Earth Sciences Department of BSC-CNS and co-senior author of the study.

Climate warming will reinforce the conditions for tropospheric O3 formation in the future, as the photochemical mechanisms of O 3 formation are favoured during heat waves and periods of high solar radiation. " Tackling climate change is key to improving air quality and, in turn, a key element to consider when designing and implementing long-term, long-lasting policies on a global scale. Also, future research should refine our results by analysing the contribution to mortality of the different economic sectors and natural sources, which are impacted by climate change." argues Oriol Jorba , Researcher and co-group leader of the Atmospheric Composition Group at the Earth Sciences Department of BSC-CNS.

Data from the 35 countries


Reference
Achebak, H., Garatachea, R., Pay, MT., Jorba, O., Guevara, M., Pérez García-Pando, C., Ballester, J. Geographic sources of ozone air pollution and mortality burden in Europe. Nature Medicine , 2024. Doi: 10.1038/s41591-024-02976-x

Nature Medicine

10.1038/s41591-024-02976-x

Data/statistical analysis

Geographic sources of ozone air pollution and mortality burden in Europe

3-Jun-2024

The authors declare no competing interests.

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Èlia Pons
Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal)
elia.pons@isglobal.org

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal). (2024, June 3). Most surface ozone contributing to premature mortality in European countries is imported. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOZWWOL/most-surface-ozone-contributing-to-premature-mortality-in-european-countries-is-imported.html
MLA:
"Most surface ozone contributing to premature mortality in European countries is imported." Brightsurf News, Jun. 3 2024, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1EOZWWOL/most-surface-ozone-contributing-to-premature-mortality-in-european-countries-is-imported.html.