
-
British Olympic medallist Proud joins drug-fuelled Enhanced Games
-
Israeli strikes on rebel-held Yemen kill 35
-
Scheffler has dual goal in first US PGA Tour start in Napa
-
US pharma giant Merck ditches plan for $1.4-bn research centre in UK
-
Study warns US emissions progress may flatline
-
Bradley hones Ryder Cup strategy as US team bonds in California
-
Victims buried after IS-linked attack in DR Congo
-
Prince Harry meets King Charles for first time since 2024
-
Veteran Vardy ready to silence doubters in Cremonese adventure
-
Speckled Martian rocks 'clearest sign' yet of ancient life
-
Ex-France goalkeeper Mandanda calls time on club career
-
'Anguish' as Cuba plunges into new electricity blackout
-
Martian rocks offer clues that might indicate ancient life
-
Musk's title of richest person challenged by Oracle's Ellison
-
New French PM vows 'profound break' with past as protests flare
-
Kuldeep stars as India crush UAE in Asia Cup T20
-
Bolsonaro judge criticizes trial, warns of 'political' verdict
-
Italy's Pellizzari scorches to Vuelta stage 17 honours
-
Italy to remain top wine producer in world: 2025 estimates
-
400-year-old Rubens found in Paris mansion
-
Pellizzari takes Vuelta stage 17 honours
-
Deadly floods inundate Indonesia's Bali and Flores islands
-
Gravitational waves from black hole smash confirm Hawking theory
-
Israel launches deadly strike on Yemen rebel media arm
-
Fossil energy 'significant' driver of climate-fuelled heatwaves: study
-
Oldest known lizard ancestor discovered in England
-
Smoke from 2023 Canada fires linked to thousands of deaths: study
-
Software company Oracle shares surge more than 35% on huge AI deals
-
UK aims to transform Alzheimer's diagnosis with blood test trial
-
US Senate panel advances nomination of Trump's Fed governor pick
-
Israeli strikes shake quiet Qatar, strain US ties
-
Russian drones in Poland put NATO to the test
-
Emotional Axelsen well beaten on return from six months out
-
US producer inflation unexpectedly falls in first drop since April
-
Viking ships make final high-risk voyage to new Oslo home
-
UK PM expresses 'confidence' in ambassador to US after Epstein letter
-
Belgium seeks US help in drug trafficking fight
-
Spain PM's wife denies embezzlement in fresh court hearing
-
Stock markets strike records despite geopolitical unrest
-
Spain to deploy 'extraordinary' security for Vuelta finale
-
Ex-Premier League referee Coote charged with making indecent child image
-
Ryder Cup pairings not 'set in stone', says Europe captain Donald
-
What we know about Israel's attack on Hamas in Qatar
-
Australia Davis Cup captain Hewitt handed ban for pushing anti-doping official
-
New French PM vows 'profound break' with past to exit crisis
-
Israel vows to strike foes anywhere after Qatar attack
-
Kony defence urges ICC judges to halt case
-
British horse racing strikes over proposed tax rise on betting
-
Zara owner Inditex shares soar as sales growth revives
-
Poland calls urgent NATO talks after Russian drone incursion

Smoke from 2023 Canada fires linked to thousands of deaths: study
Canada's record-breaking 2023 wildfires exposed more than 350 million people in North America and Europe to air pollution that likely contributed to tens of thousands of deaths, according to new estimates published Wednesday.
The findings "underscored that severe wildfires do not have only local consequences" but can inflict real harm a continent away, said the scientists behind the world-first research.
Extreme fire conditions, supercharged by climate change, fanned thousands of blazes across Canada between May and September 2023 that torched around 18 million hectares (44 million acres) -- an area larger than England.
The five-month wildfires were unprecedented in size and scale, releasing massive plumes of acrid smoke that turned skies yellow and triggered health warnings across North America.
But the smoke drifted as far as Europe, causing spikes in harmful PM2.5 pollutants and a measurable decline in air quality thousands of miles from the heat and flames in Canada.
In North America and Europe, an estimated 354 million people were exposed to levels of PM2.5 above the World Health Organization's (WHO) safe limit, concluded a new study into the long-range impact of the wildfires, published in the journal Nature.
This contributed to nearly 70,000 premature deaths on both continents -- most from breathing polluted air over months and a smaller number from acute exposure to wildfire smoke.
The findings were "striking" and surprised even the research team behind them, said Qiang Zhang, a professor of atmospheric chemistry at Tsinghua University in Beijing who led the study.
"While we anticipated large impacts from the record-breaking 2023 Canadian fires, the magnitude of the population exposure and related attributable mortalities are higher than expected," he told AFP.
"These results underscore that such extreme wildfires are no longer just a regional environmental issue and they have become a global public health concern."
PM2.5 pollutants are fine, airborne particles small enough to enter the bloodstream through the lungs, and are linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease.
- Widespread -
The team separated acute and chronic premature deaths due to PM2.5 exposure because they represented two very different types of health impacts from wildfire smoke exposure, Qiang Zhang said.
Acute deaths, he said, captured the short-term health impacts during "smoke days" when daily PM2.5 levels spiked "well above" WHO guidelines and could immediately trigger fatal events, such as heart attacks or respiratory failures.
Some 4,100 acute deaths were estimated in the United States, downwind from the wildfires, and another 1,300 in Canada itself.
Chronic deaths reflected the health burden of longer-term exposure, which increases the risks of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases and leads to premature death over time.
The study found that chronic health impacts from five months of breathing wildfire smoke were "substantial and widespread", with 41,900 deaths estimated in North America and 22,400 in Europe.
Such estimates were a first, Qiang Zhang said.
But that created limitations for researchers who lacked earlier references on the specific impact of wildfires on health, he said, forcing them to use broader evidence to base their estimates on.
The computer model they built, using satellite observations and machine learning, also could not account for the health impact of various pollutants in wildfire smoke, he added.
The authors said more research into this "underexplored" cost would be crucial as climate change made wildfires bigger, fiercer and more frequent.
H.Weber--VB