World bank’s A Breath of Change Report
Context: The World Bank’s 2025 report, A Breath of Change, highlights that nearly one billion people in the Indo-Gangetic Plains and Himalayan Foothills (IGP-HF) breathe the world’s most polluted air, necessitating urgent transboundary cooperation.
About World bank’s A Breath of Change Report:
What it is?
- “A Breath of Change” is a strategic solutions book that moves beyond diagnosing air pollution to providing a practical, multi-sectoral roadmap for the IGP-HF airshed, covering 13 jurisdictions across Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, and Pakistan.
- It frames solutions around the “4Is” framework: Information, Incentives, Institutions, and Infrastructure.
Key Trends & Data:
- Health Impact: Air pollution causes approximately one million premature deaths annually in the IGP-HF region.
- Economic Cost: The regional economic damage from pollution is estimated at 10% of GDP annually, due to lost productivity and healthcare costs.
- Life Expectancy: Exposure to PM₂.₅ reduces average life expectancy in the region by more than three years.
- Hazardous Exposure: 81% of public-school students in the region are exposed to hazardous levels of PM₂.₅ (above 35 µg/m³).
- Pollution Origin: In many jurisdictions, over 50% of ambient PM₂.₅ originates from outside local administrative boundaries.
- Regional Dominance: The IGP-HF region records the highest levels of air pollution globally, with PM₂.₅ levels 8 to 20 times the WHO guideline.
- Target Goal: The “35 by 35” target aligns with the WHO’s first interim target for cleaner air.
- Transboundary Flow: In Nepal’s Terai region, an estimated 68% of air pollution originates from other countries.
Reasons for Transboundary Pollution:
- Geography & Topography: The flat plains are surrounded by the Himalayas, which trap pollutants and lead to frequent smog episodes, especially during winter inversions.
E.g. Delhi’s unique location makes it a sink for pollutants carried from upwind states like Punjab and Haryana.
- Wind Patterns: North-westerly winds during winter carry particulate matter across national borders.
E.g. Pollution from Pakistan’s Punjab can account for up to 30% of air pollution in Indian Punjab.
- Secondary Particle Formation: Precursor gases (such as SO2SO_2SO2 and ammonia) travel long distances and react in the atmosphere to form fine particles far from their source.
E.g. Coal-fired power plants in one region emit sulfur dioxide that forms secondary PM₂.₅, affecting neighboring jurisdictions.
- Agricultural Practices: Seasonal crop residue burning creates massive smoke plumes that travel across states.
E.g. Post-harvest fires in India and Pakistan create a seasonal crisis, blanketing the entire IGP-HF region in haze.
- Industrial Clusters: High-stack industries such as thermal power plants release emissions that disperse across vast areas.
E.g. Clustered MSMEs in peri-urban areas like Kanpur and Dhaka cause intense local exposure that drifts across city limits.
Initiatives Taken So Far:
- Kathmandu Roadmap (2022): Established a regional framework for science-policy dialogue and shared air quality goals.
- Thimphu Outcome (2024): Endorsed the aspirational “35 by 35” target and emphasized harmonized monitoring and financing.
- Malé Declaration: A long-standing (non-binding) regional platform for joint monitoring and capacity building.
- India’s National Clean Air Programme (NCAP): A flagship domestic program targeting PM₁₀ reductions in over 130 cities.
- Market-Based Pilots: Gujarat’s world-first particulate matter emissions trading system (ETS) in Surat.
Challenges Associated:
- Institutional Fragmentation: Mandates are often split between environmental, transport, and agricultural ministries, leading to siloed action.
E.g. In Pakistan, overlapping duties between environmental and industrial ministries delay technology transitions.
- Funding Gaps: Regional mechanisms lack sustained, long-term financing and often rely on fluctuating donor support.
E.g. Progress on the Malé Declaration slowed significantly after external funding from SIDA ended.
- Weak Enforcement: While standards exist, agencies often lack the technical staff and resources to penalize non-compliance.
E.g. In India, half of the State Pollution Control Boards are reportedly understaffed.
- Data Gaps: Monitoring networks are concentrated in cities, leaving rural areas “blind” to pollution levels.
E.g. Pakistan lacks a functional, integrated national air quality monitoring network.
- Economic Barriers: High upfront costs deter small-scale actors (MSMEs and farmers) from adopting cleaner technologies.
E.g. The cost of retrofitting heavy-duty vehicles in India can exceed 180% of average per capita income.