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EU research addresses air pollution

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Poor air quality is a major health risk, causing lung diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer. Air pollution also impacts the environment, affecting the quality of fresh water, soil, and ecosystems. 

In Europe we are certainly feeling the effects of air pollution. In 2010, more than 400 000 people are estimated to have died prematurely from air pollution in the EU and almost two-thirds of the EU land area was exposed to excess nutrient above safe levels. 

Beyond our health and our environment, poor air quality affects our economy. It increases medical costs and damages materials and buildings. The economic cost of the health impacts alone is estimated at EUR 330-940 billion (3-9% of EU GDP). 

Air pollution is a serious and growing problem around the world, especially in major cities such as Beijing, Bangkok, Mexico City and Los Angeles. There is compelling evidence at international level that air pollution has a serious impact on health. The World Health Organisation (WHO) now classifies air pollution and particulate matter as carcinogenic. 

As a consequence of the scale and effects of the problem, the demand for low emission products and production methods is about to increase dramatically. Developing technologies and processes to better monitor, analyse and tackle air pollution will therefore not only benefit our health and environment but also boost innovation and enhance European competitiveness. 

European research efforts can help tackle air pollution by, for example, investigating ways to improve clean public transport and transport infrastructure and developing better building insulation; technologies for domestic heating appliances and IT applications that help protect us against peak pollution. 

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Responsibility for the damages caused by climate change and attribution science

Disputes and legal actions concerning climate change are on the rise, as are those aimed at obtaining compensation for damages caused by specific atmospheric events from parties believed to be responsible. This is a result of the findings of attribution science, a discipline aimed at clarifying the causal relationship between the occurrence of extreme weather events and climate change.

Image credits: Markus Spiske on Unsplash

In an article from ten years ago, addressing the issue of climate litigations, the legal disputes concerning climate change, the author noted that most of them were brought against governments to introduce limits or controls on greenhouse gas emitting activities or against companies involved in their production (especially oil multinationals) to comply with existing regulations.