Kabul, Feb 2 : It has long been a given that the air
pollution in this city gets horrific: on average even worse than Beijing’s
infamous haze, by one measure.
For nearly as long, there has been the
widespread belief by foreign troops and officials here that — let’s be blunt
here — feces are a part of the problem.
Canadian soldiers were even
warned about it in predeployment briefings, which cited reports that one test
had found that as many as 30 percent of air samples contained fecal particles.
The Canadians were worried enough that the government ordered a formal
investigation, officials say.
“I’ve heard that story for 40 years,” said
Andrew Scanlon, the head of the United Nations Environment Program here, who
dismissed it as an urban legend. “I think the need by diplomats for danger-pay
raises is what has kept reports of fecal matter danger very high.”
In
Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital, a city built for half a million people, the
wartime population has swollen to five million. Only 5 percent of Kabul’s homes
are connected to actual sewerage systems, while most household waste flows
straight into open roadside drains. Often their effluvia do not make it far
enough to join the floating hypodermic needles and assorted muck of the Kabul
River. Thanks to decades of drought, the stuff dries out and becomes part of
this place’s ubiquitous dust.
Plus, most homes are heated with a bukhara,
the Afghan version of a multifuel stove — and one of the most commonly used
fuels is dried animal dung, much cheaper than wood chips or logs.
Kabul,
a municipal official declared in 2007, “has the highest level of fecal matter in
the atmosphere in the world,” according to an article that year.
However
plausible that claim may sound, it just is not backed up by scientific evidence.
No one has been able to find, for instance, the original air-sampling studies on
which various reports have based the 30 percent fecal figures.
“It’s just
not true,” said Kabul’s mayor, Mohammad Yunus Nawandish. “Kabul air is not as
polluted with human feces as they say.”
When the United Nations
Environment Program did a study that included air sampling, in 2008, it found
plenty to worry about, but mostly what would be expected of a traffic-congested
city: a lot of sulfur dioxide and nitrous oxides. Plus a very high concentration
of particulates, known in the trade as PM 10 — which means particles smaller
than 10 microns, small enough to penetrate deeply into the lungs, and an
important indicator of air pollution — but no specific fecal bits.
A
study by the Asian Development Bank and the Afghan government’s environment
agency in 2007 similarly found the atmosphere thick with the usual suspects in
any city, especially in an underdeveloped country where fuel quality is very
poor, but it made no mention of flying feces — although toxic levels of cadmium
were noted.
In fact, when the Canadians investigated the matter in
response to their worried soldiers, the investigators said that some fecal
matter in the air was normal — even in Canada. Some of it could just be bird and
flying-insect droppings.
While Kabul might have more because of open
sewers and burning dung, that still was not a problem for two reasons:
ultraviolet radiation from the sun kills most microbes, and even those that
might survive in airborne fecal matter are not the type to invade the body by
air; they are the type more likely to infect victims through the mouth or
skin.
The investigators were also unable to find the original studies
that supposedly found such high levels of fecal matter in the air. “I’d like to
point out that I have a vested interest in this,” said a Canadian colonel who
was among the debunkers, quoted by Canada’s National Post. “I’m breathing this
air, too.”
Kabul may not have an aerial fecal problem, but it is far from
off the hook on air pollution. “Any kind of pollution is a problem,” the mayor
said.
Kabul’s geography is a big part of that: the city sits on a
6,000-foot-high plateau that looks like the bottom of a bowl, encircled by much
taller mountains. The result is atmospheric inversions during fall and winter
that trap airborne pollutants.
Dust in dry places like Kabul is a major
pollutant. It is not unusual to see police officers and pedestrians here wearing
face masks as protection.
Mayor Nawandish was not sure how his city
shapes up compared with others in overall pollution. But he said its PM 10 count
two years ago was 250 micrograms per cubic meter of air, and this year it has
dropped to 190 micrograms. “That’s because we paved a lot of roads and we
planted a lot of trees, and those two initiatives brought down pollution a lot,”
he said.
Beijing, for comparison, on a bad day has a PM 10 count of 250,
and it averages 121; the average across the world is roughly 71, according to
World Health Organization statistics.
So Kabul, with an average of 190,
is worse than the Chinese capital based on PM 10 count alone. (Researchers,
however, say there are other pollutants in Beijing’s air that add to its
specific danger.)
It is a deadly serious problem for Afghanistan’s
capital. The Asian Development Bank report calculated that such a level of air
pollution — even without feces on the fly — would result in 600,000 additional
asthma attacks annually and lead to an “excess annual mortality” of 2,287 in
Kabul.
That means that Kabul’s atmosphere is more than twice as big a
killer of civilians as the war; civilian casualties in the conflict that same
year were 1,400 — in the entire country.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Despite a whiff of unpleasant exaggeration, a city’s pollution is real
Despite a whiff of unpleasant exaggeration, a city’s pollution is real
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