Indonesians were the worst affected with an estimated 91,600 excess deaths, the report found. |
Harvard and Columbia University researchers used air
pollution readings to calculate exposure to the deadly smoke.
"We estimate that haze in 2015 resulted in 100,300
excess deaths across Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore," says the report,
which was published in Environmental Research Letters journal on September 19.
It says this is more than double the estimated number of
deaths as a result of haze in 2006, with much of the increase due to fires in
Indonesia's South Sumatra province.
Read Jewel Topfield’s story in today’s Melbourne Age - “Toxic haze from Indonesian forest fires may have caused 100,000 deaths: report.”
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