SA fingered for world’s largest air pollution town
A South Africa town, Mpumalanga,
has been conferred with the infamous honour of being the world’s largest air
pollution hotspot in these times when climate change is an extremely serious
world issue.
A groundbreaking analysis of
satellite data from June 1 to August 31, 2018 revealed the world’s largest NO2
air pollution hotspots across six continents in the most detail to date.
Greenpeace (www.Greenpeace.org)
analysis of the data points to coal and transport as the two principle sources
of air pollution, with Mpumalanga in South Africa topping the chart as the
world’s largest NO2 hotspot across six continents.
Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) is a
dangerous pollutant in and of itself and also contributes to the formation of
PM2.5 and ozone, two of the most dangerous forms of air pollution.
“It has been reported before that
the Witbank area has the world’s dirtiest air, and now this analysis of high
tech satellite data has revealed that the Mpumalanga province is the global
number one hotspot for NO2 emissions. This confirms that South Africa has the
most polluting cluster of coal-fired power stations in the world which is both
disturbing and very scary,” said Melita Steele, Senior Climate and Energy
Campaign Manager for Greenpeace Africa.
Mpumalanga is home to a cluster
of twelve coal fired power plants with a total capacity of over 32 gigawatts
owned and operated by Eskom.
The satellite data further
reveals that the cities of Johannesburg and Pretoria are also highly affected
by extreme NO2 pollution levels which blow across from Mpumalanga and into both
cities due to close proximity and regular eastwinds.
The average wind directions over
Johannesburg and Pretoria in the last 30 years on Meteoblue show that for about
28% of the year, the wind is blowing over Johannesburg from either ENE, E, ESE,
SE, SSE, and S which are all directions where the winds would be blowing
pollution from coal-fired power plants into the cities.
This means that plumes of dangerous
NO2 pollution regularly cover these cities and their 8 million people.
“Because South Africa’s
coal-belts are hidden from view for the majority of South Africans, it can be
easy to pretend that they don’t actually exist. The reality is that coal extraction
and burning has devastating impacts on the people living in the area. This
satellite data now confirms that there is nowhere to hide: Eskom’s coal
addiction in Mpumalanga means that millions of people living in Johannesburg
and Pretoria are also impacted by the pollution from coal,” continued Steele.
The list of the largest NO2
hotspots in the world includes well known coal-fired power plants in South
Africa, Germany and India, and a total of nine coal power and industrial
clusters in China. Cities such as Santiago de Chile, London, Paris, Dubai and
Tehran also feature high in the ranking due to transport-related emissions.
“Air pollution is a global health
crisis, with up to 95% of the world’s population breathing unsafe air [3].
South Africa is a significant global hotspot with its high concentration of
coal power stations and its weak air pollution standards. Our Government
urgently needs to come up with an action plan that protects millions of people,
instead of dirty coal power stations,” continued Steele.
Compared with many other
countries, South Africa has relatively weak Minimum Emission Standards (MES)
that allow coal-fired power stations to emit up to 10 times more NO2 than
allowed in China or Japan. Nonetheless, the majority of Eskom’s ancient and
highly polluting coal-fired power stations do not comply with these MES. In
2015 Eskom was granted a five year postponement from complying with MES. In
2018 Eskom has again applied for postponements for nitrogen oxides for 16 of
its 19 power plants (including 14 coal-fired power plants and 2 liquid fuel
power plants).
“Coal kills, and Greenpeace
strongly opposes any further postponements from complying with air quality
regulations and demands that all coal-fired power stations that don’t comply
with the existing air quality regulations be decommissioned on an accelerated
timeline.
“The Government should also set
up an action plan with concrete steps, measures and deadlines to make sure that
air pollution levels in high priority areas comply with existing regulations.
This means that no new coal-fired power stations can be included in the
national electricity plan (IRP 2018), unit 5 and 6 of Kusile coal power plant
in Mpumalanga must be cancelled and 50 percent of current coal-fired power
stations need to be decommissioned by 2030 in line with the IPCC Special Report
on 1.5°C,” continued Steele.
With hotspots across six
continents, the satellite imagery shows the global extent and cross-boundary
nature of the crisis.
Governments must urgently step up
their act and provide clean and healthy air for all.
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