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The LA Blaze Will Be Harmful Long After the Embers Die Out

January 16, 2025

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Mint Kolkata

Los Angeles will suffer air pollution. So too other vulnerable cities

- David Fickling

What could be more terrifying than a wall of flame sweeping through the suburbs of Los Angeles (LA)? The stealthy cloud of pollution seeping into people's lungs many kilometers away from the conflagration, which will be causing harm long after the last ember burns out.

Burning palm trees and multi-milliondollar mansions turned into ash make an unforgettable symbol of the damage climate change is wreaking. An even greater toll, however, will be counted in lives cut short not by the violence of a wildfire, but by the slow poisoning unleashed by its flames. Particulates permeate the air we breathe. Those known as PM10 are about one-tenth the width of a human hair and can penetrate our lungs, where they cause cancer and heart disease. PM2.5 is four times smaller still, and can make it into the bloodstream—almost every tissue in the human body.

Their effect on human life will endure much longer than the fire itself. About 1,890 people were killed globally in wildfires between 2000 and 2023, with the worst tolls in places similar to California: southern Europe, North America, Australia. Every year, however, nearly 100,000 people die from inhaling PM2.5 released by such disasters, with the worst effects in less affluent corners of Central America, Southeast Asia and Southern Africa.

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