The Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) annual report uses satellite data to assess levels of particulate matter worldwide, with records dating back to 1998. It translates concentrations into years of life expectancy lost, based on peer-reviewed science.
"I just don't think this can be repeated enough: particulate matter remains the greatest external threat to human health on the planet, period," Michael Greenstone, an economics professor at the University of Chicago who co-created AQLI, told AFP.
"It's worse than tobacco smoke. It's worse than child and maternal malnutrition. It's worse than road accidents. It's worse than HIV-AIDS, worse than anything in terms of losses."
According to the report, Canada's catastrophic 2023 wildfire season drove a more than 50 percent rise in particulate levels compared to 2022, while the United States saw a 20 percent increase.
Although the data currently only extends until 2023, the trend is likely to have continued as both countries face intensifying wildfire seasons, driven by warming temperatures and drought fueled by human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.
The year 2025 already ranks as Canada's second worst wildfire season.
"The very surprising finding to me is that in parts of the world, certainly Canada, certainly the US and it looks like parts of Europe as well, air pollution is like the zombie that we thought we had killed, and now it's back," said Greenstone.
While the most polluted counties in the US have historically been found in California, that's now shifting to states downwind of Canadian wildfires including Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio but also further south.
More than half of Canadians breathed air with pollution above their national standard of 8.8 micrograms per cubic meter -- a dramatic shift from less than five percent in the previous five years.
The hardest-hit regions were provinces of Northwest Territories, British Columbia, and Alberta, where particulate pollution levels rivaled those of Bolivia and Honduras, shortening lifespans by two years.
Globally, fine particulate levels -- defined as 2.5 micrometers and smaller -- were up from 23.7 micrograms per cubic meter in 2022 to 24.1 in 2023. This is nearly five times greater than the World Health Organization guideline of five.
Latin America saw its highest level since 1998, with Bolivia the worst affected country.
In South Asia -- the world's most polluted zone - pollution increased by 2.8 percent. Even China saw a small rebound of 2.8 percent after a decade of steady declines following under its "War on Pollution."
There were some bright spots: within the European Union, particulate concentrations fell by six percent, while in Central and West Africa, they dropped by eight percent.
Wildfires pile pressure on Spanish PM
Madrid (AFP) Aug 27, 2025 -
The twin crises have intensified disputes between Sanchez's Socialist minority government and the conservative Popular Party (PP), which governs many of the regions hardest hit by the fires.
Blazes have destroyed more than 415,000 hectares, mostly in August, according to the European Forest Fire Information System, marking a new annual record since reporting began in 2006.
Four people have died and thousands have been evacuated because of this month's fires.
The Socialists blame the PP for failing to implement effective fire prevention policies and for playing down climate change.
The PP points to arson as the cause of the fires and accuses the central government of withholding resources, including enough military support.
PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo has proposed creating a creating a national registry of arsonists.
But government minister Angel Victor Torres insisted on public television on Wednesday that regional governments were responsible for disaster response.
"The opposition leader shows up and points fingers instead of helping," he said, referring to the proposed arson registry.
Defence Minister Margarita Robles said many PP-led regional governments had "failed to act".
"When there has been no investment in prevention, it is not enough to say, 'The army will arrive,'" she told radio station Ser.
- 'Incompetent' -
PP spokeswoman Ester Munoz countered, accusing the government of scapegoating.
"The response of a "serious government should be 'where and when do you need resources' and not that local authorities are incompetent," she said.
The political debate mirrors the controversy that followed deadly floods in October 2024 in PP-governed Valencia.
The row comes as Sanchez's political standing has taken a hit from several investigations into alleged corruption among his inner circle.
His wife, Begona Gomez, has been ordered to appear in court again in September for questioning into alleged embezzlement of public funds.
Sanchez has dismissed the allegations against his wife -- which are related to her past job at Madrid's Complutense University -- as an attempt by the right to undermine his government.
The prime minister's former right-hand man, Santos Cerdan, was detained in June in an ongoing probe into alleged kickbacks for public contracts.
And his younger brother, David Sanchez, has been under investigation since 2024 for alleged embezzlement, influence peddling and tax fraud.
Sanchez's minority government is propped up by smaller regional parties and it has struggled to pass legislation or even a budget.
Feijoo has dismissed Sanchez as a "zombie" head of government because of his difficulty in passing laws and called for an early general election.
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