Your 20s are often spent building careers, chasing goals, and enjoying newfound freedom, but this is also the decade when lifelong health patterns are formed
Life Style

Your 20s are often spent building careers, chasing goals, and enjoying newfound freedom, but this is also the decade when lifelong health patterns are formed. Many everyday habits that feel harmless now can quietly increase the risk of serious illnesses later in life

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National Pollution Control Day: This Killer Causes More Deaths Than Tobacco

Posted By: Tarun Kumar Posted On: Dec 02, 2025Share Article
National Pollution Control Day
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National Pollution Control Day 2025: World’s Deadliest Killer Causes More Deaths Than Tobacco And Road Accidents

National Pollution Control Day 2025: The new global data shows that pollution — especially air pollution, kills far more people annually than tobacco use or road accidents.

National Pollution Control Day 2025: The new global data shows that pollution — especially air pollution, kills far more people annually than tobacco use or road accidents. Every breath of dirty air shortens lives and causes deadly diseases on a massive scale.

According to a recent report by the Health Effects Institute (HEI) in partnership with UNICEF, exposure to air pollution caused about 8.1 million deaths globally in 2021 — making it the second-leading risk factor for death worldwide, behind only high blood pressure. This means roughly one in eight deaths worldwide is now linked to polluted air.

Environmental pollution more broadly — including air, water, chemical, and soil contamination — was estimated by the World Health Organization (WHO) to have caused 12.6 million deaths in 2012.

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By contrast, the global death toll from road accidents is far lower. According to earlier WHO-linked estimates, road accidents cause about 1.25 million fatalities annually — a fraction of pollution-linked deaths.

Similarly, although tobacco is a major public health problem, recent analyses show that air pollution has overtaken tobacco as a risk factor. In short, pollution kills more people each year than road accidents — and even more than tobacco use.

One of the main reasons is tiny airborne particles (PM2.5) and pollutants such as carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, sulphur dioxide, and ozone. These pollutants come from vehicle exhaust, industrial emissions, the burning of coal/wood for cooking, waste burning, and other sources. Long-term exposure to these pollutants increases the risk of chronic diseases such as heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, chronic respiratory diseases, and acute infections. Indoor air pollution — from cooking or heating with solid fuels — also contributes significantly to premature deaths.

(Also Read: Sanchar Saathi App Guide 2025: How To Download, Register, And Use KYM To Block Stolen Phones)

Unlike dramatic events such as accidents or diseases, pollution's harm is slow, invisible, and often unrecognised. Many deaths linked to air pollution are recorded under heart disease, stroke, or lung illness — rather than “pollution.”

Because of this invisibility, pollution rarely gets the same urgent public attention as accidents or smoking — even though its death toll is much higher.

Experts argue that reducing air pollution is one of the most effective ways to save lives. Cleaner transport, green energy, better waste management, cleaner cooking fuels, and stronger regulations on industrial emissions can significantly reduce these deaths.

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Your 20s are often spent building careers, chasing goals, and enjoying newfound freedom, but this is also the decade when lifelong health patterns are formed
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