About 900 people die every hour from air pollution. I often cite the case by citing the following publication from one of the most prominent medical journals in science, Lancet.
I'll do it again, while noting that there isn't a single fucking antinuke on the planet who gives a rat's ass how many people antinukism, with its bye for fossil fuels kills:
It is here: Global burden of 87 risk factors in 204 countries and territories, 19902019: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019 (Lancet Volume 396, Issue 10258, 1723 October 2020, Pages 1223-1249). This study is a huge undertaking and the list of authors from around the world is rather long. These studies are always open sourced; and I invite people who want to carry on about Fukushima to open it and search the word "radiation." It appears once. Radon, a side product brought to the surface by fracking while we all wait for the grand so called "renewable energy" nirvana that did not come, is not here and won't come, appears however: Household radon, from the decay of natural uranium, which has been cycling through the environment ever since oxygen appeared in the Earth's atmosphere.
Here is what it says about air pollution deaths in the 2019 Global Burden of Disease Survey, if one is too busy to open it oneself because one is too busy carrying on about Fukushima:
The top five risks for attributable deaths for females were high SBP (5·25 million [95% UI 4·496·00] deaths, or 20·3% [17·522·9] of all female deaths in 2019), dietary risks (3·48 million [2·784·37] deaths, or 13·5% [10·816·7] of all female deaths in 2019), high FPG (3·09 million [2·403·98] deaths, or 11·9% [9·415·3] of all female deaths in 2019), air pollution (2·92 million [2·533·33] deaths or 11·3% [10·012·6] of all female deaths in 2019), and high BMI (2·54 million [1·683·56] deaths or 9·8% [6·513·7] of all female deaths in 2019). For males, the top five risks differed slightly. In 2019, the leading Level 2 risk factor for attributable deaths globally in males was tobacco (smoked, second-hand, and chewing), which accounted for 6·56 million (95% UI 6·027·10) deaths (21·4% [20·522·3] of all male deaths in 2019), followed by high SBP, which accounted for 5·60 million (4·906·29) deaths (18·2% [16·220·1] of all male deaths in 2019). The third largest Level 2 risk factor for attributable deaths among males in 2019 was dietary risks (4·47 million [3·655·45] deaths, or 14·6% [12·017·6] of all male deaths in 2019) followed by air pollution (ambient particulate matter and ambient ozone pollution, accounting for 3·75 million [3·314·24] deaths (12·2% [11·013·4] of all male deaths in 2019), and then high FPG (3·14 million [2·704·34] deaths, or 11·1% [8·914·1] of all male deaths in 2019).
I have never met, and never will meet, an antinuke who gives a rat's ass about these deaths, although they can prattle on forever and forever about Chornobyl and Fukushima, in the last case not giving a flying fuck about the 20,000 people who were killed by
seawater, as opposed to
radiation which killed, if not zero people, close to zero.
We have here an "I'm not an antinuke" antinuke who for some reason likes to quote the climate scientists Hansen and Karecha, who calculated the number of lives
saved from antinukes by nuclear power plants.
Prevented Mortality and Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Historical and Projected Nuclear Power (Pushker A. Kharecha* and James E. Hansen Environ. Sci. Technol., 2013, 47 (9), pp 48894895)
Have a nice day, and thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for revealing exactly and precisely the dangerous mentality behind antinuke cults.