Abstract

This paper reports on the indoor and outdoor air quality in informal urban and rural settlements in Kenya. The study is motivated by the need to improve consciousness and to understand the harmful health effects of air quality to vulnerable people, especially in poor communities. Ng’ando urban informal settlement and Leshau Pondo rural village in Kenya are selected as representative poor neighborhoods where unclean energy sources are used indoor for cooking, lighting and heating. Filter based sampling for gravimetrical, elemental composition and black carbon (BC) analysis of particulate matter with an aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 µm (PM2.5) is performed. findings from Ng’ando and Leshau Pondo showed levels exceeding the limit suggested by the world health organization (WHO), with rare exceptions. Significantly higher levels of PM2.5 and black carbon are observed in indoors than outdoor samples, with a differences in the orders of magnitudes and up to 1000 µg/m3 for PM2.5 in rural settlements. The elemental composition reveals the presence of potentially toxic elements, in addition to characterization, emission sources were also identified. Levels of Pb exceeding the WHO limit are found in the majority of samples collected in the urban locations near major roads with heavy traffic. Our results demonstrate that most of the households live in deplorable air quality conditions for more than 12 h a day and women and children are more affected. Air quality condition is much worse in rural settlements where wood and kerosene are the only available fuels for their energy needs.

Highlights

  • Good indoor air quality plays an essential role in human health and comfort

  • The first-ever World Health Organization (WHO) global conference on air pollution and health held in Geneva in 2018 reported that over 91% of the world population lives in conditions where the air quality exceeds the recommended limits

  • A few households have PM2.5 mass concentrations below the value recommended by the world health organization (WHO) of 25 μg/m3

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Summary

Introduction

Good indoor air quality plays an essential role in human health and comfort. Depending on indoor human activities and houses’ structural designs, air quality can be compromised [1]. It was emphasized that globally, one in every nine deaths is due to air pollution. The conference’s main objective was to agree on ways of reducing the annual 7 million deaths due to air pollution as well as in contributing to addressing sustainable development goals (SDGs) by 2030 [2]. Household air pollution is a passive killer and is linked to 3.8 million deaths annually [3]. Deaths due to air pollution can be traced from acute respiratory infections, lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

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