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🌍 What Gases We Breathe In and Out: The Science of Every Breath We Take

🌍 What Gases We Breathe In and Out: The Science of Every Breath We Take 🌬️ Introduction: The Breath of Life  We breathe in air, a nutritious mixture of invisible gases that keep us alive. None of us, though, pauses to think about what we are breathing. Instead of being simply "oxygen," air is a remarkable and complex mixture of gases that have evolved over millions of years as a result of industrialization, the emergence of plants, and, most recently, pollution in the modern world. This blog will examine the actual composition of the air we breathe, its historical changes, the gases we breathe in and out, and the reasons why breathing is both a scientific marvel and a cause for concern regarding the environment. 🌎 The Air We Breathe: A Historical Context 🕰️ The Antiquity of Air  The four classical elements—earth, air, fire, and water—were based on a philosophical idea before we were aware of the chemical characteristics of air. Then, through experimentation and obser...

💨 Pollution: The Invisible Killer We Created

 💨 Pollution: The Invisible Killer We Created

Our world is struggling to breathe. The air is hazy, the rivers are murky, and the air is heavy. It's no longer a distant crisis — it's here and it's shaping our lives as we speak. Pollution is our silent killer, something we created with our own hands — and many of us aren't aware of the consequences of pollution until it's too late.
This is not about dirty air or plastic waste. The conversation goes deeper than that. It's about our health, it's about the future of our communities, and it is about the future of our planet. It's time we examine this silent crisis — what the data shows us, what perceptions tell us, and what we can do to reverse this trend.

A realistic view of a polluted industrial area with factories emitting thick smoke into the air, reflecting severe air and water pollution.


💨 Pollution

Pollution describes the addition of damaging materials or forms of energy to the surrounding environment that creates harmful effects on organisms and nature. These materials, which can include chemicals, plastics, smoke, or noise, interfere with the natural systems of the planet and cause long-lasting harm to our ecosystems.

There are multiple types of pollution, including air pollution, water pollution, soil pollution, noise pollution, and light pollution. All of these types of pollution affect the environment in a negative but different manner, which leads to climate change, the loss of habitat, and health issues with humans and animals.

Pollution is simply the negative side effect of modernization and industrialization. Future generations will continue to inherit, cope with, and maintain the toxic legacy of our progress—which will always come at a cost to nature and environmental balance.

The major kinds of pollution:

Air Pollution - This originates from car exhausts, smoke from factories, fossil fuel combustion, burning waste.

Water Pollution - This arises from sewerage, industrial discharges, and the presence of plastics or agricultural run off in rivers, oceans, and other bodies of water.

Soil Pollution - This is caused by pesticides, heavy metals, the inappropriate discard of waste, and the contamination of agricultural land.

Noise Pollution - This stems from traffic, machinery, and urban clutter, and it affects humans and animals alike.

Light Pollution - This arises from excessive artificial light that disrupts the normal cycle of darkness for wildlife and humans alike, even disrupting the sleep cycle of humans.

💀 The Unseen Effects of Pollution on Health

Pollution doesn't always make itself obvious — but it's everywhere — in the air we breathe, the food we eat, and even the water we drink. A glance at the numbers paints a grim picture.

Air Pollution: The Silent Killer

As reported in the Health Effects Institute and State of Global Air Report 2025, air pollution was responsible for around 7.9 million deaths worldwide in 2023, with about 6.8 million (or 86% of total deaths from air pollution) attributed to non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including heart disease, stroke, lung disease, or dementia. 

The WHO also estimates that about 36% of the global population is exposed to levels of PM₂.₅ above the ''least stringent interim target'' of 35 μg/m³. 

In India and the neighboring area is even more dire. According to a recent IQAir global air quality ranking, the average PM₂.₅ level for Pakistan was 73.7 µg/m³, and India is expected annual average will be around 50.6 µg/m³(2024), both of which substantially exceed safe limits. 

What does this mean to us? When fine particulate matter is inhaled into our lungs and blood, it causes asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart attacks, strokes, and dementia. Indoor pollution, for example from cooking with solid fuels, affects nearly 2.6 billion people.

Contaminated Water: Poison in a Glass

Clean water is a basic human right. However, as water streams become contaminated, plastics, untreated sewage, and chemical run-off are compromising that right. While I couldn't find a single global death count due to water pollution in recent data, earlier estimates from Cornell research show that combined pollution from air, water and land caused approximately 40% of deaths globally in 2007. 

The message is clear: polluted water kills, often in silence and disproportionally to poor and vulnerable communities.

Soil Pollution: The Ground Beneath is Dying

The soil that supports our food and life is being contaminated by chemical fertilizers, heavy metals, and waste. The inheritance of those toxins is in our food chain, contaminating the plants we eat, degrading soil health, and jeopardising food security in the future. Although there are fewer up-to-date global survey statistics that cover soil pollution, its role in the pollution story is clear.

Noise and Light Pollution: The Unseen Hazards

We rarely think of noise (or artificial light) as “pollution,” but they both really are. Continual exposure to high levels of noise—from traffic, industry, urban living, etc.—has consistently been associated with a range of impacts on our quality of life including elevated stress levels, hearing loss, and disruptions of sleep, including higher rates of cardiovascular disease. Light pollution disrupts circadian rhythms, impacts human sleep and disrupts various forms of wildlife. Perhaps this is less dramatic, but still meaningful as pollution undermines the quality of life.

 How Pollution Is Destroying Our Planet

Climate Change

The combustion of fossil fuels consists of not only CO₂ emissions, but also black carbon and other dirty pollutants that change albedos, accelerating the melting of glaciers and ice caps, and capturing heat. A World Bank report found that air pollution in indoor and outdoor air causes around 5.7 million deaths annually, and costs approximately 5% of global GDP in economic losses from poor air quality.

Biodiversity Loss

Aquatic life is harmed when water bodies are contaminated. Contaminated soils cause insects and plants to disappear. This can occur throughout various ecosystems. With increasing pollution, the more species we may lose, and the loss of even one species weakens the resilience of ecosystems.

Ocean Dead Zones & Plastic Pandemic 

Runoff from agri-chemicals and agriculture has created "dead zones" in our oceans — areas where the level of oxygen is depleted to the point that aquatic life cannot survive. At the same time, the World Economic Forum states that we make over 430 million tonnes of plastic each year — and we only recycle about 9 % of it. 

The result: there is plastic waste everywhere — even in the deepest trenches of the ocean and in Arctic ice — and microplastics exist in our food chain, with unknown consequences for health as well as ecological damage.

How Humans Contributed to This Crisis 

It is often easier to place the blame on industries, governments or corporations — but the fact remains, we all played a part. Whether it is our choices toward the convenience of using sustainability or turning a blind eye toward the waste — what we do daily adds up. 

- Driving short distances instead of walking 

- Using disposable plastics, on the daily 

- Throwing trash away that has not been sorted 

- Burning trash outside 

- Not conserving energy 

There are many small things that in reality are part of a larger disaster. The invisible killer is not just pollution — it is our indifference. 

As a case in point — in IndexMundi’s 2021 global survey "Air Pollution Perceptions," survey respondents in Egypt and China rated the level of severity of air pollution in their countries as, collectively, a 7.38 out of a possible 10. India scored a 6.62.

The Path to Restoration: What We Can Do

It is not too late. Pollution may be a human factor, but so is change. We can rewrite the narrative of our planet—one small, consistent action at a time.

1. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

The 3Rs are more than a slogan—they are a way of life. Decline unneeded packaging, reuse containers, and recycle when possible. It may sound small—but billions make a big impact.

2. Plant More Trees and Green Areas

Trees are an important natural air purifier, they extract CO₂, filter toxins, stabilize soil, and create biodiversity. Green spaces in urban settings can reduce heat islands, filter particulates and contribute to mental wellness.

3.Use Clean Energy & Sustainable Transport

Install solar panels and energy-efficient appliances, or switch to an electric vehicle (EV). Use (and support) public transport, cycling or walking. There is a lot of data indicating that if policy changes can scale up, it would halve people's exposure to PM₂.₅ by 2040.

4. Choose Sustainable Brands & Practices

When you buy a good, it can be made from biodegradable packaging, operate at carbon-neutrality or have any number of other environmentally positive practices all of which you should support. Companies pay attention to market pressure and the wishes of the public.

5. Avoid Single-Use Plastics

Consider bringing a reusable water bottle, take a cloth bag with you, or bring a metal straw. Whenever possible, avoid anything that is single-use plastic - they are one of the biggest contributors to pollution around the world. The WEF statistics are a reminder that only 9 % of plastic is getting recycled.

Governments and Worldwide Responses to Pollution

The planet is becoming aware of this silent killer. Numerous countries are implementing clean-air policies, banning single-use plastics, and pursuing renewable energy programs. Recently, for example, the World Health Organization published a revised global database of air quality standards, reporting that approximately 140 countries have developed national standards, or guidelines, for PM₂.₅, NO₂, SO₂, ozone and carbon monoxide ---approximately 17 % higher than previously referenced databases.


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