Kayode Ojewale
Air is an important and vital requirement for life. Air
sustains life, but it can also snuff out life. With air one survives and lives;
with air one could also die. So it all boils down to the quality of that air.
Every living organism requires air for growth and survival. There is no life
without air. No air, no life on earth. Human beings need air to breathe because
oxygen is the propeller that allows body cells to produce energy from the food
we eat. The role air plays in human life cannot be overemphasized because it is
the main reason for life.
Air is life, life is air. Air is naturally clean and safe
for human and animals, but due to industrialization the air gradually becomes
polluted making it unsafe for inhaling or breathing. Indoor or outdoor, one is
at the risk of this polluted and unhealthy air because almost every breath
taken here in Nigeria is like the breath of death.
Passing through Ile-Epo bus stop, just after Katangua (Super
bus stop), along the Abeokuta-Lagos expressway in Lagos, one cannot but
perceive the unbearable stench oozing out from the stagnant water in the
drainage channels, particularly in front of the market area where food items
are being sold. While some people say the disturbing smell is from the
neighbouring dumpsite, Katangua, which houses heaps of refuse in that area,
others say it is due to the blocked drainage channels. The contaminated and
polluted air around that area became visibly
worse due to the rains lately. Everywhere becomes flooded anytime there
is heavy downpour. The toxic smell in that area becomes a source of worry and
concern not only for the passers-by, but also for those who buy and sell at the
Ile-Epo market given the health challenge and risk this can potentially pose.
The quality of air around that area is so bad that one can literally begin to
feel that every breath taken is choking life out of one.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), in Lagos, many
people died from diseases related to indoor and outdoor air pollution in 2012.
Also Onitsha, Kaduna, Aba, Umuahia were among four of the 20 African cities
with worst quality of air in the world according to a 2016 WHO report.
In a recent publication on an annual State of Global Air
Report published by the Health Effects Institutes (HEI), air quality in Nigeria
and at least 10 other countries is among the deadliest anywhere on earth with
higher than ambient air pollution death rates as a result of the environmental
hazards combined with extreme pollution sources like generator fumes, vehicle
emissions and crop burning among others. The HEI chart reveals that the air we
breathe in Nigeria is the deadliest in Africa and the fourth deadliest globally
with 150 deaths per 100,000 people attributable to pollution. Only Afghanistan
with 406; Pakistan, 207, and India, 195 deaths per 100,000 people per country
exceed the Nigerian figure.
The reason for these staggering figures of deaths due to air
pollution in Nigeria is not farfetched as most Nigerians are daily exposed to
polluted air indoor and outdoor. A huge volume of deadly thick smoke is visibly
seen escaping from the exhaust pipes of poorly-tuned engines of most vehicles
on our roads which in turn makes the air toxic. Worn-out generators are also
not left out as they belch out smoky fumes of noxious emissions thereby
polluting the air. Indiscriminate refuse dumping on roads and at illegal
dumpsites also contributes to air pollution.
Air pollution from indoor sources is the single largest
contributor to the negative health effects of polluted air in Nigeria. A
kerosene stove which burns with sooty flames, smoke emitted from burning of
refuse wastes and unwanted materials within the neighbourhood and lack of proper
ventilation all lead to high concentrations of particulate matter (hazardous
solid and liquid particles suspended in air) and other pollutants in the home.
Air pollution is now the fourth-highest cause of death
worldwide, with smoking, high blood pressure and poor diet topping the list. In
Nigeria, air pollution is hardly listed among causes of deaths on death
certificates, yet the effects of air pollution exposure such as lung cancer and
other diseases are fatal and deadly. Air pollution is also known to cause heart
and respiratory diseases, and damage to people’s nerves, brain, kidneys, liver
and other vital organs.
In 2018, WHO revealed that an estimated seven million people
worldwide die every year from outdoor and household air pollution.
To curb the rising threat of air pollution, a WHO Director,
Department of Public Health, Environmental and Social Determinants of Health,
Dr Maria Neira said: “Most sources of urban outdoor air pollution are well
beyond the control of individuals and demand actions by cities, as well as
national and international policymakers to promote cleaner transport, more
efficient energy production and waste management.” Dr Neira further added,
“reducing industrial smokestack emissions, increasing use of renewable power
sources, like solar and wind, and prioritizing rapid transit…are among the
suites of available and affordable strategies.”
Ministries of Health, Environment and Agriculture are all
urged to make air quality a health and development priority. For the rural
dwellers, we advise that there should be an increased public awareness on the
deadly consequences of polluted air in the household or outdoor. When the
quality of air in Nigeria improves, health expenses incurred on air
pollution-related diseases drop drastically and more lives are saved as life
expectancy grows.
Kayode Ojewale writes from Idimu, Lagos via kayodeojewale@gmail.com
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