Daily Data Insights

Bite-sized insights on how the world is changing, published every weekday.

Three countries had more women than men in parliament in 2023

A world map visualizes the percentage of seats held by women in the lower or single chamber of parliaments for the year 2023. The map features various shades of blue, indicating different levels of female representation. Areas with no data are shown in white, while light yellow represents regions with more women than men in parliament. Countries highlighted specifically include Nicaragua, Cuba, and Rwanda, which are noted for having more women than men in their legislative bodies. The darker blue shades signify regions where men hold the majority of seats, with categories for "far more men" (over 75% male representation), "more men," "equal" representation, and "more women." The footer includes data sources credited to V-Dem (2024) and Our World in Data, labeled with a Creative Commons BY license.

Women’s representation in national politics has increased dramatically in the last century.

But men still hold more parliamentary seats in almost every country. There are three exceptions: Cuba, Nicaragua, and Rwanda.

You can see this in the map. Most countries are in blue, meaning they have a higher share of men; in many countries, they make up more than 75% of the seats (shown in darker blue).

Look closely enough, and you can see the three countries in red that have more women.

This data comes from V-Dem and is based on parliamentary seats in 2023.

Explore how the share of women in parliament has changed in other countries →

Meat preferences vary a lot across different countries

This chart titled "The most popular meats vary a lot across countries" shows the percentage of different types of meat consumption across five countries: Argentina, the United States, Japan, Germany, and Ethiopia. The meats are categorized as poultry, beef, sheep and goat, pork, other meats, and fish/seafood. For example, Argentina primarily consumes beef and poultry (both 40%), while Ethiopia consumes a significant portion of beef (45%) and sheep/goat meat (28%). Japan has high consumption of fish/seafood (44%), while Germany's diet is pork-heavy (48%). The chart uses color bars to represent each meat type with a clear legend at the top.

America’s most popular type of meat is chicken. In Argentina, chicken is tied with beef. And in Japan, it’s fish and seafood.

There are large differences in the popularity of meat types across the world.

In the chart above, you can see the share of supply that comes from different types of meat: poultry, beef, pork, goat, and seafood. I’ve picked just a selection of countries that highlight some of the variation across the world.

Of course, countries also eat very different amounts of meat; this chart focuses on the relative amounts in national diets.

This data comes from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.

Explore the most popular types of meat in your country in the global dataset →

The world has probably passed “peak air pollution”

The image shows a series of six line graphs depicting the trends in global emissions of different pollutants from 1750 to 2022. The title reads "The world has passed 'peak pollution'," indicating that emissions of several pollutants have declined since their peak levels, except for ammonia.

The pollutants shown are:

- Sulphur dioxide (SO₂) – peaked in the mid-20th century and has since declined.
- Nitrogen oxide (NOx) – followed a similar pattern, peaking around the late 20th century and then dropping.
- Carbon monoxide (CO) – peaked mid-20th century and declined.
- Black carbon (BC) – shows a rise until recently, followed by a drop.
- Organic carbon (OC) – has risen steadily with a recent plateau.
- Ammonia (NH₃) – continues to rise without a recent decline.

Global emissions of local air pollutants have probably passed their peak.

The chart shows estimates of global emissions of pollutants such as sulphur dioxide (which causes acid rain), nitrogen oxides, and black and organic carbon.

These pollutants are harmful to human health and can also damage ecosystems.

It looks like emissions have peaked for almost all of these pollutants. Global air pollution is now falling, and we can save many lives by accelerating this decline.

The exception is ammonia, which is mainly produced by agriculture. Its emissions are still rising.

These estimates come from the Community Emissions Data System (CEDS).

Air pollution has not peaked everywhere in the world — explore the data for your country →

The most frequent international migration journeys are between neighboring countries

The visualization illustrates the distribution of international migrants based on the distance between their countries of origin and destination as of 2020. A horizontal axis represents the distance in kilometers, ranging from 0 to over 10,000. The vertical axis shows the share of all emigrants as a percentage.

There are data points indicating that the majority of international migrants come from neighboring countries, which are highlighted as the most common destinations. The largest share falls within the 0 to 500 kilometers distance range, with decreasing percentages as the distance increases. 

The source of the data is listed at the bottom, citing UN DESA (2020) and Natural Earth (2024). Additionally, there is a note explaining that the distances represent the shortest geographical distances between the borders of the origin and destination countries.

One way to understand how far international migrants move is to measure the shortest distance between the borders of their origin and destination countries.

The chart above shows these distances for all international migrant populations worldwide. It includes the total number of people living outside their home country rather than yearly migration flows.

Most migration journeys are short, with neighboring countries (shown as “0 km” on the chart) the most common destinations. Nearly half of all migrants — about 47% — move less than 500 kilometers, roughly the distance from the Netherlands to Switzerland. The median distance between origin and destination countries is just under 600 kilometers.

24% of migrants travel over 3,000 kilometers, about the distance from Ukraine to Portugal. Only a small fraction — less than 4% — move more than 10,000 kilometers, roughly equivalent to a journey from Madagascar to the United Kingdom.

Read our full article on how far migrants travel from their home countries

Papua New Guinea has more living languages than any other country

A horizontal bar chart displaying the number of living languages spoken in various countries. The countries listed from highest to lowest number of languages are: 

1. Papua New Guinea: 840 languages
2. Indonesia: 710 languages
3. Nigeria: 530 languages
4. India: 453 languages
5. China: 306 languages
6. Mexico: 293 languages
7. Cameroon: 279 languages
8. United States: 236 languages
9. Australia: 224 languages
10. Brazil: 222 languages

The chart is titled "How many living languages are spoken in each country? 2024" and states that a living language has at least one person speaking it as their first language. Data source is cited as Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL) International, 2024, with a note referencing Our World in Data.

Papua New Guinea has 840 living languages — more than any other country.

A living language is one that is spoken by at least one person as their first language. The chart shows the ten countries with the most living languages as of 2024. This data is from the Ethnologue dataset produced by the Summer Institute of Linguistics International.

There are over 7,000 living languages globally, meaning that more than 10% of the world’s living languages are spoken in Papua New Guinea.

Papua New Guinea was initially settled by humans around 50,000 years ago, allowing a long time for languages to be established. Around 3,500 years ago, people speaking a different family of languages (Austronesian) arrived and settled in Papua New Guinea, bringing additional diversity to the country.

Unlike many nations, Papua New Guinea did not experience historical events such as the establishment of an early centralized authority, which often led to the dominance of a single language. Instead, its rugged mountainous terrain isolated communities, fostering the independent development of numerous languages.

Explore the number of living languages in other countries

Cardiovascular disease death rates have fallen rapidly in many countries

This chart presents data on cardiovascular disease death rates per 100,000 people from 1950 to 2021 for four countries: the United States, France, the United Kingdom, and Italy. 

- The United States shows a significant decline in cardiovascular disease death rates, starting from around 500 deaths per 100,000 people in 1950 and dropping to below 150 by 2021, indicating a fourfold decrease.
- France's trend similarly reflects a decrease, with rates starting near 300 in 1950 and falling to around 50 by 2021, illustrating a fivefold reduction.
- The United Kingdom's data mirrors France's, beginning at around 500 in 1950 and reducing to around 100, also representing a fivefold decline.
- Italy exhibits a decline as well, with cardiovascular death rates decreasing from 400 per 100,000 in 1950 to around 100 in 2021, indicating a fourfold reduction.

The data source is the WHO Mortality Database (2024) and the chart is published by OurWorldInData.org.

Cardiovascular disease mortality has fallen massively since the 1950s.

This chart shows annual age-standardized death rates from cardiovascular diseases in four countries: the United States, France, the United Kingdom, and Italy.

The decline is substantial. In the United States, the death rate dropped from over 500 per 100,000 people in 1950 to under 150 in 2021 — a four-fold decline. The reduction in France and the United Kingdom was even greater, with death rates falling five-fold.

This progress comes from advancements in medical science, surgeries, emergency care, public health efforts, and dietary changes, improving cardiovascular health.

A dramatic reduction in smoking rates, better screening and monitoring for conditions like high blood pressure, and the development of life-saving treatments such as stents, statins, and clot-busting drugs have all contributed.

Explore trends in cardiovascular mortality in more countries

Five developed countries met the UN’s target for foreign aid in 2023

Map titled "Which countries met the UN's target of giving 0.7% of national income to foreign aid in 2023?" showing countries in three categories: "No data" (white), "Below the UN target" (tan), and "Meeting the UN target" (blue). Only Sweden is shown in blue, meeting the UN's foreign aid target. Countries such as the United States, Canada, Australia, and various European nations appear in tan, indicating they fall below the target. The map notes that the UN’s 0.7% target is intended for developed countries and references data from the OECD (2024).

In the 1970s, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution asking developed countries to contribute at least 0.7% of their national income to foreign aid. Most countries accepted this target, except for Switzerland and the United States.

But very few countries have met this target in the fifty years since then. Even today, only a handful of countries do.

Just five countries met this target in 2023: Norway, Luxembourg, Sweden, Germany, and Denmark. You can see them in blue on the map.

Every other developed country gave less than 0.7% of their national income.

Explore more of our new charts on foreign aid: who contributes, and where it goes →

Since 2010, the training computation of notable AI systems has doubled every six months

A chart showing the computation used to train notable AI systems, measured in total floating-point operations (FLOP) and highlighting two distinct eras. In the first era from 1950 to 2010, the training computation doubled approximately every 21 months. With the rise of deep learning since 2010, it has been doubling approximately every 6 months. The y-axis ranges from 100 FLOP to 100 septillion FLOP. Several systems are highlighted, from early systems such as Theseus and the Perceptron Mark 1 to recent systems such as GPT-4 and Gemini 1.0 Ultra.

Artificial intelligence has advanced rapidly over the past 15 years, fueled by the success of deep learning.

A key reason for the success of deep learning systems has been their ability to keep improving with a staggering increase in the inputs used to train them — especially computation.

Before deep learning took off around 2010, the amount of computation used to train notable AI systems doubled about every 21 months. But, as you can see in the chart, this has accelerated significantly with the rise of deep learning, now doubling roughly every six months.

As one example of this pace, compared to AlexNet, the system that represented a breakthrough in computer vision in 2012, Google’s system “Gemini 1.0 Ultra” just 11 years later used 100 million times more training computation.

To put this in perspective, training Gemini 1.0 required roughly the same amount of computation as 50,000 high-end graphics cards working nonstop for an entire year.

Read more about how scaling up inputs has made AI more capable in our new article by Veronika Samborska

Most migrants stay in the continent where they were born

A flow diagram showing the total number of international migrants by their birthplace and residence in 2020. The left side presents the continents that migrants moved from, with the following data: Asia has 115 million migrants, Europe has 63 million, Africa has 41 million, North America has 30 million, South America has 18 million, and Oceania has a small number that’s not specified. 

The right side illustrates the continents migrants moved to, with Asia receiving 81 million migrants, Europe gaining 85 million, Africa receiving 23 million, North America attracting 58 million, South America getting 11 million, and Oceania receiving a small number. Flow lines connect the two sides, indicating the movement patterns of migrants. 

The diagram is titled "Most people who leave their country stay on the same continent." The data source is credited to the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs from 2020, and further information can be found at OurWorldinData.org/migration. The licensing is indicated as CC BY.

Moving between continents is less common than moving to another country within the same region. For most people, international migration means crossing a nearby border, rather than a very long distance or even an ocean.

Consider Asia, the world's most populous continent.

When an Asian emigrant leaves their home country, they can either move to another Asian country or head to one of the other five continents.

Data from the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs shows that six out of ten Asian emigrants remain within Asia. In other words, more Asian emigrants move to other Asian countries than to all other continents combined.

European and North American emigrants show an even stronger tendency to stay in their continent, at 70% and 87%, respectively. This share is smaller in Africa and South America, at around half.

While this data aims to include illegal migrants, experts acknowledge the challenges in fully measuring these populations.

Read our full article on how far migrants travel from their home countries

In the last 30 years, almost everybody in Bangladesh gained access to basic electricity

A line graph illustrates the share of the population in Bangladesh with access to basic electricity from 1991 to 2021. Basic electricity means it can provide lighting, and charge a phone or power a radio for at least four hours per day.

Annotations on the graph explain: "In 1991, only ~14% of the Bangladeshi population had basic access to electricity" and "In 2021, 99% of people had electricity access."

In 1991, fewer than 15% of people in Bangladesh had access to electricity. Thirty years later, access was almost universal.

Over 100 million Bangladeshis have gained access to electricity during this time. This enables them to light their homes, use household appliances, or stay connected through phones and the Internet.

The statistic measures the lowest “tier” of energy access: the capacity for basic lighting and charging a phone for at least four hours a day. But more than half the people in Bangladesh now also have a higher tier of electricity access, which means capacity to power high-load appliances (such as fridges) and electricity for more than eight hours a day.

The UN has set a target to achieve universal access to electricity by 2030. Currently, about 9 in 10 people worldwide have basic access to electricity.

You can explore the progress in other countries in our SDG Tracker here

Global cement production has plateaued over the last decade

The chart shows global cement production from 1926 to 2023, highlighting a significant rise in production over the last century. The y-axis represents production in billions of tons, and the x-axis shows the timeline.

From 1926 to around 2000, there was a steady increase in cement production, followed by rapid growth between 2003 and 2013, during which production doubled. The chart notes this doubling with a marker. After 2013, growth slowed, with the line showing a plateau and slight fluctuations. The graph emphasizes that growth in cement production has decelerated over the last decade after the earlier rapid expansion.

Global cement production grew rapidly through the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s. In the decade from 2003 to 2013 alone, production doubled from 2 to 4 billion tonnes.

But, as you can see in the chart, this growth has stalled in the last 10 years. There has been some variation from year to year, but overall, global production has stayed around 4 billion tonnes. This data comes from the United States Geological Survey (USGS).

China was a significant driver of global growth in the 1990s and 2000s but has also reached a plateau in production. It now produces more than half of the world’s cement.

Cement production makes up around 7% of global CO2 emissions.

Explore global trends in other metals and minerals in our data explorer

Countries differ sharply in how many refugees they host

A bar chart displays the number of refugees per 1,000 people in various countries for the year 2023. The countries are listed on the left alongside their corresponding values represented by horizontal bars. Lebanon has the highest number, with 137 refugees per 1,000 people, followed by Jordan with 60. Turkey follows with 37, while Germany has 31. Poland shows 25 refugees per 1,000, and the Netherlands has 13. France reports 10, the UK shows 6.5, Italy has 5, and the US has the lowest with 1.2. Each country is accompanied by its national flag. The data is sourced from UNHCR for 2024 and can be found at OurWorldInData.org/migration.

Some countries take in far more refugees than others relative to their population.

A refugee is defined by the UN as someone needing international protection, who has fled their home country and whose home country’s government cannot or will not protect them.

This chart shows the cumulative number of refugees per 1,000 people in the country where they live as of 2023.

There are huge differences between countries: Lebanon hosts 137 refugees for every 1,000 residents — over four times as many as Germany (31) or Poland (25). Those numbers are still much higher than the Netherlands (13) and France (10), far above the United States at just 1.2 refugees per 1,000 residents.

These differences reflect conflicts in neighboring regions and national policies welcoming or deterring refugees.

Explore the number of refugees per 1,000 people for more destination countries

In many countries, more than half of the population faces poverty in multiple dimensions

A world map illustrates the share of the population living in multidimensional poverty, defined as deprivation in health, education, and living standards. The map employs varying shades of purple and pink to indicate the percentage of the population affected by multidimensional poverty in different countries. 
Countries are marked with a gradient from light pink (representing 0% of the population living in multidimensional poverty) to dark purple (representing 100%). For some countries, specific percentages are highlighted, such as 91% in Niger, 84% in Chad, and 80% in the Central African Republic. Areas with no data are shown in diagonal stripes. The footer notes the data comes from Alkire, Kanagaratnam, and Suppa (2024) as part of the Global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) 2024. It mentions that the estimates are based on recent household survey data from 2011 to 2023, but for 62% of countries, the data refers to the period after 2018. The chart is published by Our World in Data.

The experience of poverty goes far beyond having no or low income. Unfortunately, still in many countries today, a large share of people experience severe poverty in many areas of life, such as health, education, and living standards.

To capture this broader reality, researchers from the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative and the UN Development Programme developed the global Multidimensional Poverty Index. This group of indicators measures poverty across essential areas of well-being, capturing whether people are undernourished, whether they lost a child, and lack access to education or basic facilities like clean water or electricity.

The map shows the share of the population in each country living in multidimensional poverty, highlighting where households face overlapping deprivations.

In countries across South America and some in East Asia, this share is less than 10%. But in many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, more than half of the people experience these extreme conditions. The share even exceeds 4 in 5 people in Niger (91%), Chad (84%), and the Central African Republic (80%).

These figures are based on data from over 100 countries drawn from household surveys conducted between 2011 and 2023.

Read more on our article: Beyond income: understanding poverty through the Multidimensional Poverty Index

The world has passed “peak child”

This chart titled "The world has passed 'peak child'" shows the historical and projected population of three age groups: young people under 25 years, young people under 15 years, and children under 5 years. Data spans from 1950 to 2100, based on UN estimates and projections.

The blue line represents the population under 25 years, showing steady growth until around 2050 when it starts to slightly decline.
The red line represents those under 15 years, peaking around 2020, and then gradually declining after that point.
The green line shows children under 5 years, which has largely plateaued since the 1990s and is projected to decrease over time.
The chart indicates that the global number of children has reached its peak, and a long-term decline in younger populations is expected.

The number of children in the world has stopped growing. This moment in time was given the term “peak child” by the late Hans Rosling.

The chart shows the estimated number of children under five years old globally up to 2023, with projections from the United Nations out to 2100. The UN thinks the number of under-5s peaked in 2017.

The chart also shows the number of young people under 15, which peaked in 2021. And the number of under-25s, which may have peaked last year.

“Peak child” is a sign that the world is on course for “peak population”. The UN expects the world population to start falling before the end of the century.

Read more about the key insights from the latest UN World Population Prospects →

Men are more likely to smoke than women almost everywhere in the world

This is an image of a scatter plot comparing the share of adult men and women who smoke any form of tobacco across different countries. The x-axis represents the share of women who smoke, while the y-axis represents the share of men who smoke. Each dot on the graph represents a country, and countries are color-coded by region: Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania, and South America.

The plot shows that in almost every country, a higher percentage of men smoke compared to women, as most countries fall above the diagonal line labeled "A higher share of men smoke."

Almost one-quarter of adults in the world smoke tobacco. However, there are significant differences by gender.

More than one-third of men smoke, while less than one in ten women do.

Men are more likely to smoke in almost every country in the world. You can see this on the chart, which plots the share of men who smoke versus the share of women. Nearly all countries lie above the diagonal line, which means more men smoke than women.

This data is collated and published by the World Bank. It’s based on adults aged 15 years and older and includes all tobacco products.

Explore all of our data and research on smoking across the world →

Childhood cancer deaths in the United States have declined six-fold over the last seventy years

This chart presents US cancer death rates in children under five years old, measured in reported annual death rates per 100,000 children. It consists of four graphs:

1. All Malignant Cancers Combined: This graph, shown in black, illustrates a decline in childhood cancer death rates from about 11 per 100,000 in 1950 to around 1.8 in 2021, indicating a six-fold decrease since the 1950s.
   
2. Leukemia: This graph shows a decrease from around 5 per 100,000 in 1950 to less than 1 in 2021, following a similar declining trend throughout the decades.

3. Brain and Nervous System Cancers: This chart shows some fluctuations but overall a decline from nearly 0.8 per 100,000 in 1950 to about 0.4 in 2021.

4. Lymphomas and Multiple Myeloma: This graph shows fluctuations and a decline from around 0.8 in the late 1950s to less than 0.2 by 2021.

The data is sourced from the WHO Mortality Database (2024), with a note indicating that figures may fluctuate year-by-year due to low numbers.

Childhood cancer deaths in the United States have fallen dramatically over time, as shown in the chart. It presents annual cancer death rates in children under five years old.

There has been a six-fold decline since the 1950s.

This progress reflects decades of collaboration between scientists, clinicians, and public health workers.

One major success story has been in treating acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a common form of leukemia in children: researchers identified genetic mutations that caused the disease, making it possible to develop targeted chemotherapy drugs that have greatly improved survival. Surgeries, bone marrow transplants, and other treatments have also played a role.

We’ve also seen big improvements for other blood cancers, such as lymphomas and multiple myeloma, though progress has been slower for cancers of the brain and nervous system.

Explore more data on our page on cancer

Life expectancy has continued to rise in the longest-lived countries

A graph depicting female life expectancy at birth over the years, with the vertical axis representing lifespan in years, and the horizontal axis indicating years from 1840 to 2023. Various colored dots represent different countries, with Hong Kong with the highest in 2023 at 88.1 years. The graph notes that Hong Kong and Japan have held records for the past 40 years. Previously, countries like Iceland, Norway, Australia, and Sweden were among the highest. Data sources are the Human Mortality Database for 2024 and UN World Population Prospects for 2024.

Record national life expectancies have been climbing for over a century.

In 1840, Swedish women had a life expectancy of 46 years — the highest of any country recorded that year. By 1921, Australia held the record at 63 years.

For most of the 20th century, Iceland, Norway, Australia, and Sweden competed for the top position before being overtaken by Japan in 1984. Hong Kong and Japan have held the records since then.

These countries didn’t merely catch up; they’ve continued to push the limits higher.

Japan added six more years to female life expectancy between 1984 and 2010, rising from 80 to 86 years.

This remarkable rise has resulted from many advances in medicine, public health, and living standards — breaking many predictions of the “limits” of life expectancy.

Read more in our article about the rise of maximum life expectancy

Almost half of people born in Syria have left. Where have they gone?

A bar chart displaying the total number of Syrian emigrants residing in various destination countries as of 2020. The largest bar, representing Turkey, shows 3.79 million emigrants. The second bar for Lebanon indicates 1.04 million, followed by Saudi Arabia with 823,000. Other countries listed include Germany (707,000), Jordan (699,000), Iraq (254,000), Sweden (191,000), Egypt (126,000), Netherlands (89,000), United States (84,200), and Canada (57,000). An annotation notes that in 2020, around two-thirds of Syrian emigrants lived in Turkey, Lebanon, or Saudi Arabia. The data source is cited as UN DESA (2020), with a note that these numbers describe cumulative migrant stock rather than annual movements. The chart includes icons of national flags corresponding to each country.

Since the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011, many people have left the country. By 2020, around 8.5 millions had emigrated, representing nearly half (48%) of all people born in the country.

As you can see on the chart, most Syrian emigrants have stayed close to home. Two-thirds of Syrian emigrants now live in Turkey, Lebanon, or Saudi Arabia, with Turkey alone hosting over 40%.

Political obstacles have made it difficult for Syrian migrants to move beyond neighboring countries and reach Europe. In 2016, the European Union and Turkey made a deal to curb migration by keeping migrants in Turkey in exchange for 6 billion euros in aid.

The Syrian case is part of a larger global pattern: most individuals who leave their country stay in the same continent.

Read our full article on how far migrants travel from their home countries

Since 1960, Singapore's GDP per capita has risen from one-third of that of Western Europe to twice as much

A line graph depicting GDP per capita in Singapore compared to Western Europe from 1960 to 2022. The vertical axis represents GDP per capita in international dollars, ranging from $0 to over $80,000, with key figures labeled along the y-axis. The horizontal axis represents years from 1960 to 2022.

The blue line shows Singapore's GDP per capita, which starts at $3,460 in 1960 and sharply rises to approximately $80,300 by 2022. Annotations mention that Singapore's GDP has increased 23-fold since 1960, growing from one-third of Western Europe’s level to nearly twice as much by 2022.

The red line indicates Western Europe's GDP per capita, starting at $10,900 in 1960 and growing steadily to about $41,300 in 2022. 

The graphic includes a note indicating that the data is adjusted for inflation and differences in the cost of living between countries. Data sources are cited as "Bolt and van Zanden - Maddison Project Database 2023" and a link to further information is provided: "OurWorldinData.org/economic-growth | CC BY."

In 1960, Singapore’s GDP per capita — a measure of average income — was a third of the average in Western Europe. It was even lower than Western Europe’s average income in 1900.

Since then, while Western Europe experienced steady growth, Singapore grew even faster. By 1994, it had surpassed Western Europe, and today, its average income is roughly twice as high. This is after adjusting for inflation and differences in living costs between countries.

Singapore became an independent republic in 1965. Key factors in its economic success include anti-corruption policies, investment in education and human capital, and its development as a global financial hub.

Explore how GDP per capita trajectories compare across countries

China has reduced sulphur dioxide emissions by more than two-thirds in the last 15 years

Line chart showing the change in sulphur dioxide emissions in China from 1900 to 2022. Emissions have declined rapidly since around 2006, dropping by more than two-thirds.

China has dramatically reduced local air pollution levels — particularly in its biggest cities — in the last decade.

One rapidly declining pollutant is sulphur dioxide (SO2), which generates smog and can cause acid rain. Its primary source is coal burning.

In the chart, you can see the annual emissions of SO2 in China. They rose steeply during the 1980s and 1990s. But they peaked in the mid-2000s, and over the last 15 years, they have fallen by more than two-thirds.

Putting emissions limits on coal plants and introducing desulphurization technologies that remove SO2 from smokestacks were critical drivers of this decline.

These are modeled estimates from the Community Emissions Data System (CEDS).

See whether air pollution has increased or decreased in your country →

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