Poor black households carry majority of South Africa’s air pollution burden, indoor air-pollution more serious threat than outdoor – IRR policy paper
28 September 2016
The IRR has produced a policy paper on air quality sponsored by the Recycling and Development Initiative for South Africa (REDISA).
According to the IRR, South Africans face two types of air pollution. The first is outdoor air pollution of the type created by power stations or large industrial producers. The IRR found that while South Africa’s cities fall short of World Health Organisation (WHO) standards when it comes to outdoor air quality, that is also true for 98% of all large cities.
According to the IRR while outdoor air pollution deserved policy attention a far more serious problem is indoor air pollution.
Ivo Vegter, an independent journalist who was commissioned by the IRR to do research for the paper, said, "The problem of indoor air pollution is generally overlooked but has very serious health implications”. Vegter found that low indoor air quality affects 20% of the population with most of the burden falling on poor black households.