
The good news is that scientists have just found a new side effect of cities for us all to worry about. The specialised cancer agency of the WHO, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), published a report yesterday that classified outdoor air pollution as carcinogenic to humans. According to the findings, the polluted air in our cities is putting us at risk of lung and bladder cancer, and their conclusion has some morbid endorsement – in 2010, there were 223,000 deaths from cancer worldwide as a result of pollution."The air we breathe has become polluted with a mixture of cancer-causing substances," says Dr Kurt Straif from the IARC. "We now know that outdoor air pollution is not only a major risk to health in general, but also a leading environmental cause of cancer deaths."In the UK, The Clean Air Act of 1956 banned using coal for fires and put an end to the famous "London smog"; the EU does a lot to make cars pollute less through setting standards on emissions, and all of our power stations have filters to sift out the worst of what passes through them. By many indicators, Europe is less polluted than it was after the Second World War. But in our cities – particularly London – the problem is the amount of cars, buses and lorries, especially the ones that run on diesel. The UK has air quality targets that London is well off track on.

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Dr Dana Loomis: As part of this evaluation, we collected available data on pollution levels around the world. This is too extensive to list here, but in brief the most polluted cities now are in Asia, South America and Africa. However, there are important variations in the level of pollution, even within Europe. Full details will be in the monograph, but it won't be published for another year.Has pollution got worse in European cities?
In fact, it has got better for the most part. The overall level of air pollution in Europe is much lower than 30 to 40 years ago, but the improvement hasn't been equal for all places and all pollutants. The increase in diesel-powered vehicles is a complicating factor that has led to slower declines in NO2 [nitrogen dioxide, a pollutant that London has a particularly high amount of] levels and may have increased the amount of carcinogenic material emitted to the air.The Clean Air Act did some good in the UK. It seems to me that the problem – in London, at least – is the sheer number of vehicles, and I know there are clean air targets for London that aren't going to be met any time soon.
Yes, the UK Clean Air Act had an early and very significant impact. You're right also that the increase in the number of vehicles and distances driven has slowed progress in some respects, particularly in Eastern Europe.
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Not necessarily. Pollution levels in most of Europe and North America have been reduced substantially as a result of controls imposed since the 1970s, and further reductions are already under discussion. The most important challenges today are in the new industrialising countries, such as India, China, Chile and Brazil. Some of those countries are already taking steps to control air pollution.What can we do about how polluted our cities are becoming?
Air pollution is first and foremost a public health problem, in the sense that the air belongs to everyone but no single individual controls it. Air pollution has to be addressed by collective action at local, national and international levels. The role of IARC is to provide scientific information, like this evaluation, as a basis for taking appropriate actions.What can individual citizens do to protect themselves from this pollution?
Unfortunately, not very much.Are our cities killing us?
The health issues arising from air pollution are significant and should be taken seriously, but it's important to keep them in perspective. The risk of lung cancer associated with air pollution at the levels now existing in advanced developed countries are comparable to passive smoking. That's important enough to take action, but not the same magnitude as active smoking, for example.Thanks, Dr Loomis.
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