Air Pollution from Forest and Vegetation Fires in Southeast Asia
Disproportionately Impacts the Poor
Abstract
Forest and vegetation fires, used as tools for agriculture and
deforestation, are a major source of air pollutants and can cause
serious air quality issues in many parts of Asia. Actions to reduce fire
may offer considerable, yet largely unrecognised, options for rapid
improvements in air quality. In this study, we used a combination of
regional and global air quality models and observations to examine the
impact of forest and vegetation fires on air quality degradation and
public health in Southeast Asia (including Mainland Southeast Asia and
south-eastern China). We found that eliminating fire could substantially
improve regional air quality across Southeast Asia by reducing the
population exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5)
concentrations by 7% and surface ozone concentrations by 5%. These
reductions in PM2.5 exposures would yield a considerable
public health benefit across the region; averting 59,000 (95%
uncertainty interval (95UI): 55,200-62,900) premature deaths annually.
Analysis of subnational infant mortality rate data and
PM2.5 exposure suggested that PM2.5 from
fires disproportionately impacts poorer populations across Southeast
Asia. We identified two key regions in northern Laos and western Myanmar
where particularly high levels of poverty coincide with exposure to
relatively high levels of PM2.5 from fires. Our results
show that reducing forest and vegetation fires should be a public health
priority for the Southeast Asia region.