Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
Environment
RFI

Wildfires producing 'witches' brew' of air pollution, UN warns

Wildfires in the Amazon, Canada and Siberia have brought home how air quality can be impacted on a vast scale. © Colby Rex O'Neill / AFP

Geneva (AFP) – Wildfires are releasing a "witches' brew" of pollutants that can end up wrecking air quality a continent away from the blaze, the UN's weather and climate agency said Friday.

The World Meteorological Organisation said the quality of the air people breathe was interlinked with climate change, and the two issues needed to be tackled together.

Wildfires in the Amazon, Canada and Siberia have brought home how air quality can be impacted on a vast scale, the WMO said in its fifth annual Air Quality and Climate Bulletin.

"Climate impacts and air pollution respect no national borders – as exemplified by intense heat and drought which fuels wildfires, worsening air quality for millions of people," said WMO deputy secretary-general Ko Barrett.

Wildfires cause surges in PM 2.5 particles, which can penetrate deep into the lungs © Cesar Manso / AFP

The bulletin looked at the interplay between air quality and the climate, highlighting the role of tiny particles called aerosols in wildfires, winter fog, shipping emissions and urban pollution.

Particles with a diameter of less than 2.5 micrometres (PM 2.5) are considered particularly harmful since they can penetrate deep into the lungs or cardiovascular system.

Wildfires in 2024 led to above-average PM 2.5 levels in Canada, Siberia and central Africa, the WMO said. The biggest PM 2.5 surge, however, was in the Amazon basin.

How forests decimated by wildfires still have the power to heal

Wildfire season stronger, longer

"The wildfire season has the tendency to be stronger and longer every year as a result of climate change," said WMO scientific officer Lorenzo Labrador, who coordinated the bulletin.

The terraced vineyards of the Swiss shores of Lake Geneva were left blanketed in haze from smoke from Canadian wildfires in June 2025 © Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP

Wildfires in Canada have ended up causing air pollution in Europe.

"We had that last year and this year as well. So you have a degradation in air quality across continents when the meteorological conditions are right," Labrador told a press conference.

"What we have from these fires is essentially a witches' brew of components that pollute the air."

The World Health Organization estimates that air pollution causes more than 4.5 million premature deaths each year.

The WMO called for improved monitoring and better policies to safeguard human and environmental health – and reduce agricultural and economic losses.

The WMO said winter fog episodes in northern India were growing in frequency and duration © Narinder NANU / AFP

The bulletin highlighted pollution hotspots in northern India.

It said the Indo-Gangetic Plain, home to more than 900 million people, had seen a marked rise in air pollution and winter fog episodes, which are growing in frequency and duration due to pollution, notably from agricultural biomass burning.

"Persistence of fog is no longer a simple, seasonal weather event – it is a symptom of escalating human impact on the environment," it said.

Meet the NGOs striving to save the last forests of the Comoros

Dramatic improvements in China

PM 2.5 levels continued to decline in eastern China last year, which the WMO put down to sustained mitigation measures.

When countries take measures to combat poor air quality, the improvement can be clearly seen in meteorological data, said Paolo Laj, the WMO's global atmosphere chief.

Shanghai has seen improvements in air quality along with other parts of eastern China © HECTOR RETAMAL / AFP

"Look at Europe, Shanghai, Beijing, cities in the United States: many cities have taken measures and you see in the long term, a strong decrease" in recorded air pollution, he told AFP.

"Over a 10-year period, Chinese cities have improved their air quality in a dramatic way. It's really impressive what they have done."

Laj said there was no all-purpose measure that could bring about drastic change, such as switching to electric cars, "but when measures are taken, it works".

In Europe, "we don't realise what we were breathing in 20 years ago, but it was much worse than today", he added.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.