Monday, September 19, 2016

Scientists say smoke from fires in Indonesia killed 100,000 people

  1. Scientists say most of the deaths occured in Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia. IN studying all this more this means that 100,000 died from 1997 fires and 100,000 more died from 2015 fires.

     

    Indonesia Fires El Niño: Why the World Should Care...

    time.com/4088640/indonesia-fire-health
    More than 100,000 fires in Indonesia have engulfed the ... Tens of thousands of people have been declared victims of respiratory ... The smoke from the fires is ...
  2. ... the thick smoke choking cities in the region is ... More than 75,000 people are already ... director of forest fire control in Indonesia’s ...
  3. During Indonesia's dry season, certain people ... Those fires generate huge amounts of smoke, ... They calculated that the 100,000-plus fires in Indonesia ...
    • Indonesia's Forest Fire Haze May Have Killed 100,000 People
      onenewspage.com
    • Tom Sater looks at the causes of the thick haze blanketing ...
      cnn.com
    • Indonesia Rainforest Fire Global Emergency For Palm Oil
      youtube.com
    • INDONESIA: HAZE FROM FOREST FIRES BRINGS ILL HEALTH TO ...
      youtube.com
  4. 1997 Indonesian forest fires - Wikipedia, the free...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1997_Indonesian_forest_...
    1997 Indonesian forest fires ... Vietnam and the Philippines had also felt the haze from the smoke of the forest fires. ... Forest fires in Indonesia in 1997 were ...
  5. begin quote from:

    Smoke from 1997 Indonesian forest fires killed...

    www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/scienceshow/smoke</...
    Smoke from 1997 Indonesian forest fires ... 2013 shows smoke billowing from fires in areas ... in Indonesia where it was in excess of 100,000 deaths that ... 

    Smoke from 1997 Indonesian forest fires killed more than 100,000

    Saturday 6 February 2016 12:20PM (view full episode)
    Global analysis of deaths from landscape fires has revealed in excess of 100,000 deaths can be attributed to the Indonesian forest fires of 1997. The fires of 2015 were bigger. As Fay Johnston explains, smoke and haze is a problem similar to the release of greenhouse gases. Those who produce the gases don’t necessarily suffer the consequences. Despite the existence of international agreements on smoke haze which drifts across borders, Fay Johnston says the management of smoke and haze remains a great challenge.


    Transcript

    Show

    Guests

    Fay Johnston
    Public Health Physician and Environmental Epidemiologist
    Menzies Institute for medical Health
    University of Tasmania
    Hobart Tasmania

    Credits



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