Giving Compass' Take:
- Extreme heatwaves across Europe are record-breaking and impact the air quality of cities and towns, causing concern over air pollution.
- How can local leaders address environmental and health concerns?
- Read more about the public health risks of heatwaves.
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On Wednesday morning, the punishing heatwave that has roiled western Europe over the last week abated, heading east toward central Europe. The heat broke records across the United Kingdom and France and leaves a path of destruction in its wake: Train tracks and roads in London buckled, homes burned down in what was the city fire service’s “busiest day since the Second World War,” and parts of France and Portugal continued to blaze, forcing thousands to flee.
Extreme heat already inflicts a deadly toll on public health. In Spain and Portugal, where the national high reached 117 degrees, officials have reported more than 1,900 heat-related deaths in the last week — a number sure to rise in the coming weeks. But there’s a dangerous side effect too: air pollution. And as climate change leads to more frequent and severe heatwaves, bouts of bad air quality are exacerbating their health impacts.
On Tuesday, scientists from the European Union’s Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service warned of unhealthy levels of ozone across a large swath of Europe. “The potential impacts of very high ozone pollution on human health can be considerable,” said Mark Parrington, a senior Copernicus scientist, in a release. Ozone can cause a host of respiratory issues, like a sore throat, cough, or asthma attacks, and cardiovascular illness. According to the Climate and Clean Air Coalition, it contributes to 1 million premature deaths around the world each year.
Ground-level ozone pollution is not emitted directly to the atmosphere. Rather, it forms when greenhouse gasses and emissions from cars, industrial facilities, and power plants are mixed into a chemical soup, which the sun then bakes into ozone. Heat speeds up those reactions, so ozone levels tend to skyrocket on extremely hot days.
The searing heat and dry conditions also primed southern Europe to burn, and wildfires are still raging across Portugal, Spain, and France. Those blazes also contributed to poor air quality by producing thick plumes of fine particulate matter, also known as PM2.5. When people inhale the fine soot, it makes its way deep into the lungs or even the bloodstream, increasing their risk for asthma, heart attacks, and strokes.
Read the full article about heatwaves and air pollution by Lina Tran at Grist.