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  6. Effect Of Tree Canopy Cover On Air Pollution-related Mortality In European Cities: An Integrated Approach

Effect of tree canopy cover on air pollution-related mortality in European cities: an integrated approach

Pierre Sicard1, Ionuţ-Silviu Pascu2, Stefan Petrea2

  • 1ACRI-ST, Sophia-Antipolis, France; INCDS, Voluntari, Romania.

The Lancet. Planetary Health|June 14, 2025

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View abstract on PubMed

Summary

Increasing urban tree cover in European cities can significantly reduce premature deaths from air pollution. A 5% increase in tree canopy could prevent nearly 5,000 deaths annually, highlighting the public health benefits of urban greening.

Area of Science:

  • Environmental Science
  • Public Health
  • Urban Planning

Background:

  • Harmful air pollutants in urban areas include fine particles (PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and tropospheric ozone (O3).
  • Urban greening is recognized as a strategy to improve air quality, mitigate climate change, and enhance citizen well-being.
  • This study quantifies the impact of tree cover on air pollution and associated mortality in European cities.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To estimate changes in tree cover across European urban centers.
  • To assess the mortality burden attributable to PM2.5, NO2, and O3 pollution.
  • To determine the potential mortality reduction achievable through increased urban tree coverage.

Main Methods:

  • Quantitative health impact assessment conducted across 744 European urban centers (population >50,000) in 36 countries.
  • Analysis focused on the relationship between mean tree cover, air pollutant levels (PM2.5, NO2, O3), and all-ages mortality.
  • City-wide scale analysis performed to estimate effects on air quality and mortality.

Main Results:

  • Mean tree coverage increased by 0.76% between 2000-2019, with 73.5% of centers showing increased green cover.
  • A 5% increase in tree canopy cover could improve air quality by reducing PM2.5 by 2.8%, NO2 by 1.4%, and O3 by 1.2%.
  • In 2019, 25% of the population resided in areas with over 30% tree canopy coverage.

Conclusions:

  • Increasing tree canopy cover by 5% could prevent an estimated 4,727 premature deaths annually from air pollution in European urban centers.
  • Achieving 30% canopy cover in all cities could potentially prevent 11,974 premature deaths each year.
  • Expanding urban tree coverage offers significant public health benefits, contributing to more sustainable, livable, and healthier cities.

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