For two decades, air pollution has increased annually in South Asia, but satellite data for 2022-the most recent year available-showed a surprise 18 percent fall
AÂ surprise improvement in air quality in South Asia in 2022 drove a decline in global pollution, with favourable weather a likely factor, a new report said Wednesday.
But the region continues to breathe the world's most-polluted air, with its residents losing more than 3.5 years of life expectancy on average, the annual Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) warned.
And globally, most countries have either no pollution standards or are failing to meet what they have set, subjecting their citizens to air quality that causes a broad range of health problems.
For two decades, air pollution has increased annually in South Asia, but satellite data for 2022—the most recent year available—showed a surprise 18 percent fall.
The declines were recorded in every country in the region apart from Sri Lanka, according to the report, produced by the University of Chicago's Energy Policy Institute (EPIC).