Low pollution during lockdown may have saved 630 lives, $690 mn: Study
The Covid-19 lockdown-led reduction in air
pollution levels across five Indian cities in India, including Delhi and
Mumbai, may have prevented about 630 premature deaths, and saved $690 million
in health costs in the country, according to a new study.
Scientists,
including those from the University of Surrey in the UK, assessed the levels of
harmful fine particulate matter (PM2.5) from vehicles and other sources in five
Indian cities -- Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai and Hyderabad -- since the
beginning of the lockdown period.
The
study, published in the journal Sustainable Cities and Society, compared these
lockdown PM2.5 figures from 25 March up until 11 May, with those from similar
periods of the preceding five years, and found that the measure reduced pollution
levels in all these places.
According
to the scientists, during this period, the levels of these harmful air
pollutants reduced by 10 per cent in Mumbai, and by up to 54 per cent in Delhi.
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