PM2.5 pollution, population exposed to levels exceeding WHO Interim Target-1 value (% of total) - Country Ranking - Asia

Definition: Percent of population exposed to ambient concentrations of PM2.5 that exceed the World Health Organization (WHO) Interim Target 1 (IT-1) is defined as the portion of a country’s population living in places where mean annual concentrations of PM2.5 are greater than 35 micrograms per cubic meter. The Air Quality Guideline (AQG) of 10 micrograms per cubic meter is recommended by the WHO as the lower end of the range of concentrations over which adverse health effects due to PM2.5 exposure have been observed.

Source: Brauer, M. et al. 2017, for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Bahrain 100.00 2017
1 Iraq 100.00 2017
1 Qatar 100.00 2017
1 Saudi Arabia 100.00 2017
1 Yemen 100.00 2017
6 Nepal 99.96 2017
7 Bangladesh 99.95 2017
8 Kuwait 99.90 2017
9 Afghanistan 99.66 2017
10 Pakistan 99.61 2017
11 Oman 98.94 2017
12 United Arab Emirates 98.31 2017
13 Turkey 91.58 2017
14 India 84.76 2017
15 China 81.24 2017
16 Tajikistan 79.97 2017
17 Syrian Arab Republic 69.77 2017
18 Mongolia 63.30 2017
19 Bhutan 54.86 2017
20 Iran 49.63 2017
21 Myanmar 42.89 2017
22 Vietnam 34.48 2017
23 Armenia 34.26 2017
24 Jordan 19.81 2017
25 Dem. People's Rep. Korea 19.31 2017
26 Uzbekistan 17.98 2017
27 Kyrgyz Republic 12.61 2017
28 Israel 6.07 2017
29 Lao PDR 4.10 2017
30 Thailand 3.15 2017
31 Turkmenistan 0.81 2017
32 Russia 0.79 2017
33 Indonesia 0.59 2017
34 Azerbaijan 0.56 2017
35 Georgia 0.17 2017
36 Lebanon 0.00 2017
37 Sri Lanka 0.00 2017
37 Cambodia 0.00 2017
37 Korea 0.00 2017
37 Philippines 0.00 2017
37 Malaysia 0.00 2017
37 Japan 0.00 2017
37 Kazakhstan 0.00 2017
37 Brunei 0.00 2017
37 Timor-Leste 0.00 2017
37 Singapore 0.00 2017

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Development Relevance: Air pollution places a major burden on world health. In many places, including cities but also in rural areas, exposure to air pollution is the main environmental threat to health, responsible for 6.5 million deaths per year, about one every 5 seconds. Around 40 percent of the world’s people rely on household burning of wood, charcoal, dung, crop waste, or coal to meet basic energy needs. Cooking and heating with solid fuels create harmful smoke and particles that fill homes and the surrounding environment. Household air pollution from cooking and heating with solid fuels is responsible for 2.9 million deaths a year. Long-term exposure to high levels of fine particles in the air contributes to a range of health effects, including respiratory diseases, lung cancer, and heart disease, resulting in 4.2 million deaths annually. Not only does exposure to air pollution affect the health of the world’s people, it also carries huge economic costs and represents a drag on development, particularly for low and middle income countries and vulnerable segments of the population such as children and the elderly. Three interim targets were defined for PM2.5 and have been shown to be achievable with successive and sustained abatement measures. Countries may find these interim targets particularly helpful in gauging progress over time in the difficult process of steadily reducing population exporsure to PM. IT-1 level corresponds to the highest mean concentrations reported in studies of long-term effects, and may also reflect higher but unknown historical concentrations that may have been contributed to observed health effects. IT-1 level has been shown to be associated with significant mortality in the developed world.

Limitations and Exceptions: Pollutant concentrations are sensitive to local conditions, and even monitoring sites in the same city may register different levels. Direct monitoring of PM2.5 is still rare in most parts of the world, and measurement protocols and standards are not the same for all countries. These data should be considered only a general indication of air quality, intended to inform cross-country comparisons of the health risks due to particulate matter pollution. The guideline set by the World Health Organization (WHO) for PM2.5 is that annual mean concentrations should not exceed 10 micrograms per cubic meter, representing the lower range over which adverse health effects have been observed. The WHO has also recommended guideline values for emissions of PM2.5 from burning fuels in households.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: A. van Donkelaar, R.V. Martin, M. Brauer, N.C. Hsu, R.A. Kahn, R.C. Levy, A. Lyapustin, A.M. Sayer, D.M. Winker, "Global Estimates of Fine Particulate Matter using a Combined Geophysical-Statistical Method with Information from Satellites, Models, and Monitors," Environ. Sci. Technol 50, no. 7 (2016): 3762–3772;GBD 2017 Risk Factors Collaborators, "Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks for 194 countries and territories, 1990–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017," Lancet 392 (2018): 1923-1994; Shaddick G, Thomas M, Amini H, Broday DM, Cohen A, Frostad J, Green A, Gumy S, Liu Y, Martin RV, Prüss-Üstün A, Simpson D, van Donkelaar A, Brauer M. Data integration for the assessment of population exposure to ambient air pollution for global burden of disease assessment. Environ Sci Technol. 2018 Jun 29. Data provided by Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington, Seattle. Data on exposure to ambient air pollution are derived from estimates of annual concentrations of very fine particulates produced by the Global Burden of Disease study, an international scientific effort led by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington. Estimates of annual concentrations are generated by combining data from atmospheric chemistry transport models, satellite observations of aerosols in the atmosphere, and ground-level monitoring of particulates. Overlaying PM2.5 estimates with gridded population data, the percent of a nation's people that lives in areas where PM2.5 concentrations exceed recommended levels is calculated by summing the population for grid cells where PM2.5 concentrations are beyond a threshold value, in this case 10 micrograms per cubic meter, and then dividing by total population.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual