| Assessing the Health Benefits of Urban Air Pollution Reductions Associated
with Climate Change Mitigation (2000-2020): Santiago, Sao Paulo, Mexico City, and New York City Luis Cifuentes, Victor H. Borja-Aburto, Nelson Gouveia, George Thurston, and Devra Lee Davis Abstract To investigate the potential local health benefits of adopting greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation policies, we develop scenarios of GHG mitigation for México City, México ; Santiago, Chile ; São Paulo, Brazil ; and New York, New York, USA using air pollution health impact factors appropriate to each city. We estimate that the adoption of readily available technologies to lessen fossil fuel emissions over the next two decades in these four cities alone will reduce particulate matter and ozone and avoid approximately 64,000 (95% confidence interval [CI] 18,000-116,000) premature deaths (including infant deaths) , 65,000 (95% CI 22,000-108,000) chronic bronchitis cases, and 46 million (95% CI 35-58 million) person-days of work loss or other restricted activity. These findings illustrate that GHG mitigation can provide considerable local air pollution-related public health benefits to countries that choose to abate GHG emissions by reducing fossil fuel combustion. Key words: air pollution, climate policy, greenhouse gases mitigation, morbidity, mortality, ozone, particulate matter, public health. -- Environ Health Perspect 109(suppl 3) :419-425 (2001) . http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2001/suppl-3/419-425cifuentes/abstract.html The full version of this article is available for free in HTML format. |