Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2019-10-14)

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asthma.Britishpeopletendedtoshrugwhenweaskedthem
abouttheair.“It’snotasbadasIndia’s,is it?”they’dsay.
I discoveredanundercurrentofagonizingstoriesfrom
pollutionémigrés:thebicyclistterrifiedbyanasthma
attack;thedoctoralcandidatefroma ruraltownwhogave
upherdreamtofleetheLondonair.I wasfeelingtrapped
andworriedforourownchildren.Wasit alljustconfirma-
tionbias?WasthereanyhardevidencetoprovewhatI felt
inmychest?WhateverhappenswithBrexit,thismuchis
certain:Fordecades,Europewillbeunitedbyfilthyair
anda slowlyunfoldingpublic-healthcrisiscausedbyits
embraceofdiesel—something that was supposed to heal
the environment.

King’s College London operates the world’s most extensive
network of air-monitoring stations, 117 of them in almost
all of London’s 32  boroughs. Their instruments gener-
ate a pollution map marked red for the highest levels and
green for the lowest. The result is something like a blood-
shot eye: red in the city’s center and down the arteries of
major roads. It’s a visual representation of what makes this
era of traffic-borne pollution so insidious. Conditions are
worst exactly where the most people live. Nitrogen oxides
produced by the combustion of diesel engines react with
air to form NO2, a toxic gas that inflames the lung, heart,
and brain and has been linked to cancer and dementia in
addition to respiratory illnesses. Diesel tailpipes also pro-
duce tiny particles known as PM2.5s. A secondary pollutant,
ozone, forms when the pollutants react with sunlight—and
those levels, too, have worsened with climate change.
London has exceeded EU limits for NO2 since 2010, and

levelsarealsohighinMunich,Paris,andothercitiesthat
embraceddiesel.SomedaysinLondon,theaveragelevel
ishigherthaninBeijing,morethandoublingthelegal
maximum.
I visited Frank Kelly, head of the Environmental Research
Group at King’s College, in his office not far from the teem-
ing traffic of Waterloo Bridge. His early research focused
on how to give premature babies the right amount of oxy-
gen to save them without hurting them; in recent years he’s
overseen efforts to determine safe levels for pollutants. He
hasn’t found them. And he gets especially frustrated by the
fatalist streak of people who say the air could be worse.
“You’ve got to bring this home,” he tells me. “It’s you, your
children if you live in London. As an educated society, we
shouldn’t do this to people.”
Instudyafterstudy,thecollegehasshownevidence
ofdramatichealtheffects.Onefoundthatpollutantson
traffic-clogged Oxford Street wiped out the respiratory
benefits of a walk there for people over 60. Another found
teenagers living in dirtier air had 70% greater odds of devel-
oping psychosis. A third followed 2,500 schoolchildren in
east London over seven years. By the end, those who’d
breathed the most NO2 had lungs as much as 8% smaller.
Kelly calls that “a clinically important” decrease. Lungs only
grow until age 18, and their capacity starts dropping at 30.
If the organ starts out smaller, people are more likely to
have worse outcomes: twitchy, reactive lungs that develop
asthma or other respiratory diseases. “It’s a really strong
marker for later problems in life,” he says. Dutch research-
ers estimate 33% of new childhood asthma cases in Europe
are caused by air pollution.

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◼REMARKS Bloomberg Businessweek October 14, 2019

MATT COOPER/GALLERY STOCK

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