Skip to main content

Premature Deaths in Africa Due To Particulate Matter Under High and Low Warming Scenarios.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Shindell, D; Faluvegi, G; Parsons, L; Nagamoto, E; Chang, J
Published in: GeoHealth
May 2022

Sustainable development and climate change mitigation can provide enormous public health benefits via improved air quality, especially in polluted areas. We use the latest state-of-the-art composition-climate model simulations to contrast human exposure to fine particulate matter in Africa under a "baseline" scenario with high material consumption, population growth, and warming to that projected under a sustainability scenario with lower consumption, population growth, and warming. Evaluating the mortality impacts of these exposures, we find that under the low warming scenario annual premature deaths due to PM2.5 are reduced by roughly 515,000 by 2050 relative to the high warming scenario (100,000, 175,000, 55,000, 140,000, and 45,000 in Northern, West, Central, East, and Southern Africa, respectively). This reduction rises to ∼800,000 by the 2090s, though by that time much of the difference is attributable to the projected differences in population. By contrast, during the first half of the century benefits are driven predominantly by emissions changes. Depending on the region, we find large intermodel spreads of ∼25%-50% in projected future exposures owing to different physics across the ensemble of 6 global models. The spread of projected deaths attributable to exposure to fine particulate matter, including uncertainty in the exposure-response function, are reduced in every region to ∼20%-35% by the non-linear exposure-response function. Differences between the scenarios have an even narrower spread of ∼5%-25% and are highly statistically significant in all regions for all models. These results provide valuable information for policy-makers to consider when working toward climate change mitigation and sustainable development goals.

Duke Scholars

Altmetric Attention Stats
Dimensions Citation Stats

Published In

GeoHealth

DOI

EISSN

2471-1403

ISSN

2471-1403

Publication Date

May 2022

Volume

6

Issue

5

Start / End Page

e2022GH000601

Related Subject Headings

  • 4206 Public health
  • 4104 Environmental management
  • 3702 Climate change science
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Shindell, D., Faluvegi, G., Parsons, L., Nagamoto, E., & Chang, J. (2022). Premature Deaths in Africa Due To Particulate Matter Under High and Low Warming Scenarios. GeoHealth, 6(5), e2022GH000601. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022gh000601
Shindell, D., G. Faluvegi, L. Parsons, E. Nagamoto, and J. Chang. “Premature Deaths in Africa Due To Particulate Matter Under High and Low Warming Scenarios.GeoHealth 6, no. 5 (May 2022): e2022GH000601. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022gh000601.
Shindell D, Faluvegi G, Parsons L, Nagamoto E, Chang J. Premature Deaths in Africa Due To Particulate Matter Under High and Low Warming Scenarios. GeoHealth. 2022 May;6(5):e2022GH000601.
Shindell, D., et al. “Premature Deaths in Africa Due To Particulate Matter Under High and Low Warming Scenarios.GeoHealth, vol. 6, no. 5, May 2022, p. e2022GH000601. Epmc, doi:10.1029/2022gh000601.
Shindell D, Faluvegi G, Parsons L, Nagamoto E, Chang J. Premature Deaths in Africa Due To Particulate Matter Under High and Low Warming Scenarios. GeoHealth. 2022 May;6(5):e2022GH000601.

Published In

GeoHealth

DOI

EISSN

2471-1403

ISSN

2471-1403

Publication Date

May 2022

Volume

6

Issue

5

Start / End Page

e2022GH000601

Related Subject Headings

  • 4206 Public health
  • 4104 Environmental management
  • 3702 Climate change science