Breathing in Namibia is Injurious to Health.

Air pollution threatens the health of 2.8 million people across 13 regions in Namibia. The average PM2.5 level is 15 µg/m³—3.0Ɨ higher than the WHO guideline.

Brought to you by Amrit Sharma

Air Pollution in Namibia

Namibia faces significant air pollution challenges. 100% of states exceed the WHO guideline for clean air. This is putting 2.8 million across 13 states at risk.

The average PM2.5 over 2023 was 15µg/m³. That's 3.0 times the WHO guideline for clean air of 5µg/m³.

This is equivalent of everybody, including children, smoking about 249 cigarettes in a year.

Life Expectancy Impact

Every person in Namibia is losing 0.99 years of their life to air pollution. This isn't just a statistic—it's grandparents who won't see their grandchildren graduate. Parents missing birthdays. Lives cut short. Breathing kills.

These stolen years come from diseases you know—COPD that makes every breath a struggle, lung cancer that turns healthy tissue deadly, heart attacks that strike without warning, strokes that change everything in an instant. Air pollution doesn't just kill. It damages your body from the inside, every single day.

Across Namibia, 2.7M years of life hang in the balance. That's the collective future being taken from 2.8 million people—simply by breathing.

Population Exposure by Pollution Level

Distribution of population across different PM2.5 pollution levels. The WHO guideline is 5 µg/m³—only populations below this threshold are breathing safe air.

< 5 µg/m³
0%
0
5-10 µg/m³
15%
412K
10-15 µg/m³
31.1%
857K
15-25 µg/m³
53.9%
1.5M
25-35 µg/m³
0%
0
> 35 µg/m³
0%
0