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Slashing soot is among the fastest, most effective way to slow climate change and reduce air pollution, new study finds
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Figure 1 | Regional contribution to black carbon emissions with 60% of emissions in South Asia coming from residential combustion of fuels. Source: Clean Air Fund
Kathmandu – A new report by the Clean Air Fund backed by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development calls for urgent action to reduce black carbon emissions.
Black Carbon (BC), which is commonly seen as soot, is an SLCP or short-lived climate pollutant with a short lifespan but devastating longer term consequences.
“Black carbon accelerates ice melting in the Arctic and the glaciers, ice sheets, icebergs, and sea ice that make up the wider cryosphere. Black carbon emissions also disrupt Asian and West African monsoon precipitation, leading to increased flooding that adversely impacts agriculture, lives, and livelihoods, and contribute to localised warming and extreme heat.”, says the report.
In the Hindu Kush Himalaya, addressing BC, through investment in clean cooking, heating, and lighting, can lead to lowered local carbon emissions, improved health outcomes, and more sustainable development.
“Based on data from 2013, residential solid fuel burning and brick kilns together account for 45%–66% of the anthropogenic black carbon deposition in the Hindu Kush Himalaya region, which encompasses parts of eight countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Myanmar, India, and Pakistan)”, states the report.
According to the report, cooking, heating and lighting are responsible for most of South Asia’s BC emissions. Rice mills, brick making and sugar industries are also significant emitters.
As a component of fine particulate matter, black carbon contributes to ill health and more than 8 million premature deaths in 2021. It is also a driver of economic costs of air pollution, equivalent to over 6% of global GDP each year, with its impacts particularly felt among the poorest and most marginalised households and workers.
Black carbon is also a large driver of glacier melt around the world. In one study conducted on a glacier in the Central Himalayas, black carbon contributed to 39% of total mass loss observed during the pre-monsoon. Black carbon is a major reason why the Arctic is warming four times faster than other parts of the world, which is increasing the chances of dangerous climate tipping points being breached. For this reason, the impact of black carbon on the cryosphere deserves particular attention.
The report states that BC reduction could “…minimise rainfall disruptions and avoid rainfall extremes, flooding, and drought.” This has implications for food security especially in a region that is reliant on steady monsoons and reliable rainfall for a good harvest.
In spite of this, not enough is being done to address black carbon. The Clean Air Fund report identifies six types of obstacles to action – political, scientific, financial, regulatory, industrial and communication. It argues that solutions that already exist could deliver an 80% reduction in black carbon by 2030, from 2010 levels, compared to a 3% reduction on a ‘business as usual’ trajectory.
Izabella Koziell, Deputy Director General at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) said: “The fastest way to achieve progress on clean air is to target the abatement of black carbon and other super-pollutant sources coming from sectors like residential biomass combustion, transportation and industry, amongst others. ICIMOD’s experience in the Hindu Kush Himalaya region shows that investing in cleaner technologies, along with continued advanced monitoring, and a strong policy support mechanism can lead to long-term environmental, economic and health benefits—an approach that is critical for one of the world’s most polluted regions.”
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For media inquiries, please contact:
Neraz Tuladhar (Raz), Media Officer Email: media@icimod.org
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