Close X
Friday, November 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wildfire smoke pollution linked to thousands of annual deaths: global study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Oct, 2024 10:09 AM
  • Wildfire smoke pollution linked to thousands of annual deaths: global study

A new international study co-authored by a Canadian researcher says climate change is contributing to thousands more wildfire smoke-related deaths than in previous decades. 

The modelling study estimates that about 12,566 annual wildfire smoke-related deaths in the 2010s were linked to climate change, up from about 669 in the 1960s. 

Sian Kou-Giesbrecht, an assistant professor at Dalhousie University who contributed to the study, says the results attest to the importance of reducing planet-warming greenhouse gases. 

She says the study did not find significant changes in smoke-related deaths from Canada's boreal wildfires, suggesting that's likely due to the country's relatively small population size and how tricky it is to model forest fires in the region, given its unique mix of shrubs and peat. 

The study indicates the biggest influence was found in South America, Australia and Europe.  

The results, published Monday in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Climate Change, build on another study by the same research group that suggested climate change had increased the global area burned by wildfire by about 16 per cent from 2003 to 2019.

MORE National ARTICLES

Charges laid in White Rock man's shooting

Charges laid in White Rock man's shooting
Charges have now been laid in the fatal April 2022 shooting of 33-year-old White Rock resident David Goldstein. At the time of his death, police said the shooting -- at a south Surrey home -- did not appear random, but was not linked to the ongoing Metro Vancouver gang conflict.  

Charges laid in White Rock man's shooting

RCMP say several injured after coach bus rolls over in Saskatchewan

RCMP say several injured after coach bus rolls over in Saskatchewan
Firefighters had to break windows to free people trapped in a coach bus that rolled Wednesday morning in southeast Saskatchewan. Dwayne Stone, the fire chief for the Town of Grenfell, said they were called out to the crash on the Trans-Canada Highway east of Wolseley just after 7 a.m. Roads were extremely slippery after the area was doused by rain then covered in snow. 

RCMP say several injured after coach bus rolls over in Saskatchewan

Legislation to reduce housing starts delays

Legislation to reduce housing starts delays
Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon says new legislation introduced today will reduce housing construction delays, delivering more homes for residents sooner.  He says that if Bill 44 is passed, local governments would need to shift their planning process to an "upfront framework." 

Legislation to reduce housing starts delays

Judge tells Ibrahim Ali jury to disregard testimony of Crown witness who died

Judge tells Ibrahim Ali jury to disregard testimony of Crown witness who died
Dr. Tracy Pickett, a specialist in emergency and clinical forensic medicine who was called as an expert witness by the Crown, had not finished testifying in B.C. Supreme Court when she was found dead on Sept. 28. She had testified about injuries suffered by the 13-year-old girl Ali is accused of killing.  

Judge tells Ibrahim Ali jury to disregard testimony of Crown witness who died

Judge says man who hit and killed two fellow UBC students should serve 3 years

Judge says man who hit and killed two fellow UBC students should serve 3 years
Provincial court Judge Glenn Lee told the court in Richmond, B.C., that Tim Goerner will still be young when his sentence is done and he can then spread a message to people about the dangers of drinking and driving. The court heard he had been drinking at a party before the high-speed crash that killed Emily Selwood and Evan Smith as they walked down a sidewalk on the university campus in the early morning hours of Sept. 26, 2021.

Judge says man who hit and killed two fellow UBC students should serve 3 years

Sex offender Randall Hopley removed his ankle bracelet to avoid court date: police

Sex offender Randall Hopley removed his ankle bracelet to avoid court date: police
Hopley, 58, is wanted on a Canada-wide warrant and has a history of convictions for assault, property offences and sexual crimes that include three offences against children. He was declared a long-term offender and handed a six-year prison term for the 2011 abduction of a three-year-old boy from his home in Sparwood in southeastern British Columbia.  

Sex offender Randall Hopley removed his ankle bracelet to avoid court date: police