On the other hand, fossil fuels continue to claim tens of thousands of lives every year to a largely muted response. Coal, for instance, is estimated to lead to 13,000 premature deaths in the
United States and 18,000 deaths in
Europe every year. A study claimed that air pollution (largely from the burning of fossil fuels) leads to somewhere between 10,000 to 30,000 premature deaths every year in Delhi alone. Yet another study estimated that 670,000 people died prematurely in
China in 2012 alone due to health ailments triggered by the country’s dependence on coal. In India,
PM2.5 pollution which is produced by all types of combustion including motor vehicles, power plants, industry and agricultural burning, led to 627,000 deaths. Globally, WHO
estimated 7 million deaths due to air pollution in 2012. While this air pollution is caused by a host of factors including dust and forest fires, the combustion of fuels is a significant contributor. (Then there are international and civil wars triggered by energy resource politics – the toll of which would be harder still to estimate).