Global environmental pollution - statistics & facts
Air pollution
Air pollution is one of the most pressing environmental issues facing humanity. Around the world, billions of people are exposed to unsafe air that puts them at risk of adverse health effects including stroke, heart disease, cancer, and premature death. Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is the air pollutant that poses the greatest threat. In 2022, PM2.5 was the leading external risk to human health, having reduced the average life expectancy by roughly two years. Although poor air quality affects people in all corners of the globe, PM2.5 levels are typically highest in developing regions, where there is a bigger reliance on heavily polluting industries and energy sources. As a result, millions of air pollution-related deaths are recorded in these regions every year.Land pollution
Land pollution refers to the deterioration of the earth's surfaces through direct or indirect human activities. There are many forms of land pollution, including agricultural fertilizer use (which has soared in recent decades), construction, mining, and waste disposal at landfill sites – the largest of which span hundreds of acres . Deforestation is also a devastating form of land pollution, with large swathes of tree cover cleared every year for agricultural purposes to meet the growing demand for commodities. In addition to negatively impacting wildlife and human health, land pollution can also result in land degradation, which is now believed to be advancing at a rate faster than can be restored.water pollution
As of 2023, barely half of the world’s water bodies achieved a good quality status. Aquatic environments are contaminated by a wide range of factors, but the largest causes of water pollution are industrial discharges, agriculture runoff, and untreated sewage. Mismanaged solid waste on land is another significant cause of water/aquatic pollution, with plastic waste an ever-growing concern around the world. As of 2020, around 150 million metric tons of mismanaged plastic waste had accumulated in the world’s oceans and rivers, and this figure is expected to double by 2040.Releases of pollutants into water sources can destroy marine ecosystems, compromise quality, and, in the case of drinking water resources, make it unsafe for human consumption. In fact, unsafe water sources are attributable around one million deaths every year worldwide, on average. As with air pollution, it is those in developing regions that are the most exposed to poor water quality and its detrimental effects.
Pollution prevention efforts
While pollution continues to be a major global issue, there have been some successes with regard to prevention efforts. The increased use of clean energy sources and stricter emissions standards helped reduce average global PM2.5 levels by 17 percent between 2010 and 2022, to 24.2 μg/m3 – the lowest level in two decades. Meanwhile, efforts to improve water quality in line with Sustainable Development Goal 6 have seen the number of people with access to safely managed drinking water increase by 55 percent since the turn of the century to almost six billion. This in turn has significantly reduced the number of deaths attributed to unsafe water.Though there have been many efforts made to address environmental pollution over the decades, the world is still a long way off eliminating it. Human activities continue to wreak havoc across the planet, meaning much more sustainable habits are required to protect ecosystems and human health.