Your browser does not support this video. Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Harvard-Health-Report-on-Air-Pollution---Web-Video-27MZIFJJH3Z6V.htmlConceptually similarHarvard Health Report on Air Pollution - Web Video (Clean Version)GP0STQGCFCompleted★★★★Harvard Health Report on Air Pollution - Web VideoGP0STQG9LCompleted★★★★Harvard Health Report on Air Pollution - Web Video (Clean Version)GP0STQG9NCompleted★★★★Activists Tackle Air Pollution with Art - Web Video (Clean Version)GP0STQFW4Completed★★★★Activists Tackle Air Pollution with Art (English Text Version)GP0STQFW3Completed★★★★A Deadly Double Standard - Web Video (Clean)GP0STU18RCompleted★★★★A Deadly Double Standard - Web Video (English)GP0STU18QCompleted★★★★A Deadly Double Standard - Web Video (Vietnamese)GP0STU18UCompleted★★★★Air Pollution Action at Eskom's Megawatt Park in Johannesburg - Web VideoGP0STTRTVCompleted★★★★View AllGP0STQGCGHarvard Health Report on Air Pollution - Web VideoApproximately 50,000 lives a year could be saved by 2030 if no new coal-fired power plants are built in Southeast Asia, South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, according to a groundbreaking peer reviewed study from researchers at Harvard University and Greenpeace International.Air pollutant emissions from coal-fired power plants in these regions currently cause an estimated 20,000 excess deaths per year, increasing to 70,000 by 2030 if coal-fired power plants presently planned or under construction go ahead. The majority of these mortalities (55,000 by 2030) will be in Southeast Asia.Date:18 Jan, 2017Credit:© GreenpeaceDuration:1m3sAudio format:Final MixProduction Type :WEB VIDEOKeywords:Actions and protests-Activists-Air pollution-Balloons-Climate (campaign title)-Coal-Coal-fired power stations-Health-Illness-KWCI (GPI)-Masks (protective)-Statues-Street theatre actions-Toxics (campaign title)Shoot:Harvard Health Report on Air Pollution Explainer VideoApproximately 50,000 lives a year could be saved by 2030 if no new coal-fired power plants are built in Southeast Asia, South Korea, Japan and Taiwan, according to a groundbreaking peer reviewed study from researchers at Harvard University and Greenpeace International.Air pollutant emissions from coal-fired power plants in these regions currently cause an estimated 20,000 excess deaths per year, increasing to 70,000 by 2030 if coal-fired power plants presently planned or under construction go ahead. The majority of these mortalities (55,000 by 2030) will be in Southeast Asia.