
Climate change and industrial pollution are worsening the healthcare crisis in Bangladesh, according to a media report. The Irish Times reported that despite emitting only about 0.3 per cent of global CO2 emissions from combustible fuels, the air quality in Bangladesh's capital city, Dhaka, regularly ranks among the worst in the world. This is surging diseases such as asthma, lung cancer, bronchitis, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the capital city. According to climate scientists, Bangladesh -- with its low and flat land --is one of the world's most vulnerable countries to climate change.
It currently has a population of about 174 million people, and by 2050, it could become the most populous city, as per a recent UN report.
If environmental pollution continues to worsen, it could cause Bangladesh's health system to “completely break down”, said Dr Mustafijur Rahman, from the National Institute of Diseases of the Chest and Hospital in Dhaka.
He added that many live in slums, often beside industrial areas, where “the sewage system is not sufficient for standard living,” and there is a “contamination of infections from one to another”.
“Brickfields around Dhaka pose a health hazard, as do garment factories and tanneries, with fumes sent out into the air and hazardous materials thrown into the rivers, polluting the water,” the report noted.
The report also mentioned the high healthcare costs, which often push people into debt. And to repay the debt, people are forced to travel abroad, often illegally crossing the Mediterranean to Europe.
“The political unrest in our country is making this more difficult,” said Dr. Md. Safiun Islam (50), an assistant professor of respiratory medicine who also works at the hospital.
He said the number of patients has “exponentially increased” in five years: they sometimes have a queue of 20-30 people waiting to be admitted to the ICU.
Controlling “pollution-producing sectors” is “an emergency,” he said.
With elections on February 12th -- the first since long-time prime minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in August 2024 -- Rahman called for efforts to separate industrial areas from residential ones, and to educate Dhaka's residents about personal hygiene, sanitation, and decreasing risks.
He urged the new government to do “proper planning” and make sure to put the “right person in the right place”.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
Mumbai Pollution Linked To 57% Of Lung Cancer Cases: Maharashtra Government Warns of Health Crisis
Written by Shreya GoswamiInside Bengal's 800-Km "Green Wall" Along Jharkhand Border To Fight Air Pollution
Reported by Rittick MondalUnited Nations Approves First Carbon Credits Under Paris Agreement
Agence France-PresseRising air pollution in Mumbai is now being linked to 57% of lung cancer cases, the Maharashtra government told the state assembly.
The Mamata Banerjee-led government plans to set up an 800-km long greeen corridor, which will work as a "bioshield" - a forested area that would act as a "Green Wall" - along the Jharkhand border to intercept pollutants entering Bengal.
The United Nations announced the approval of the first carbon credits under a global market aimed at reducing emissions, a mechanism that has faced scrutiny over greenwashing concerns.
Air pollution is a concern not just for Mumbai but for countries and cities around the world, Maharashtra Environment Minister Pankaja Munde told NDTV Wednesday, after the city woke this morning to a blanket of smog for an eighth straight day.
Mumbai woke up to yet another blanket of haze on Tuesday morning, with a grey veil hanging over the skyline from Bandra to South Mumbai.
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