Adam Alton Profile picture
Sep 24, 2020 11 tweets 4 min read Read on X
In London, fewer deaths have been caused by Covid-19 than are lost due to air pollution each year.

Yup.

1/
First, fact checking!..

As of 18/09/20, total hospital Covid deaths in London was 6,172. In-hospital deaths are estimated to be 73% of total.
data.london.gov.uk/dataset/corona…

So 8,455 total London Covid deaths.

2/
The 2015 King's College London report on Air Pollution put annual deaths from PM2.5 at 3,537 and from NO2 at 5,879. (This is after accounting for a 30% overlap between the effects of PM2.5 and NO2.)
london.gov.uk/sites/default/…

So 9,416 annual London air pollution deaths.

3/
But are these deaths *caused by* these factors, or are they just *premature* deaths?

There's been a lot of discussion about this with Covid - underlying health conditions, would they have died soon anyway, etc.

But with the air pollution this is *not* the case…

4/
Those are not 9,416 deaths which were slightly premature due to air pollution. That's not how it's calculated.

It's calculated by taking the total life years lost (140,743) and converting that into a figure of "equivalent deaths", which is 9,416.

5/
Before we jump to any kind of "this proves we should take action on air pollution instead of Covid" type statements, it should be noted that if we had not taken action on Covid then the Covid figure would be much much higher.

6/
It should also be noted that I've taken the air pollution deaths for a whole year, whereas the Covid deaths are only for the year *so far*. Maybe we should multiply the air pollution deaths by 0.715 to account for them only being up to September 18th.

7/
But it should also be noted that the air pollution deaths are happening every year.

Every.

Year.

How far back should we add them up? 2015? 2010? 2000? And how far forwards should we project them? As far as I know, humans don't develop immunity to air pollution.

8/
Tackling air pollution is a difficult. It requires practical changes, attitude changes, and shifting social norms.

I'm not going to put my ideas for tackling it here, I'm just going to leave this for you to think about, to spark your own ideas, maybe rage, and then action…

END
Well that unexpectedly took off! If you're feeling generous and would like to support the new wellbeing platform that I'm launching then I'd love your support on our crowdfunder natwestbackherbusiness.co.uk/fidlleaf

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More from @altonpowers

Dec 26, 2020
So then, what has caused more deaths in #London this year, #Covid19 or #AirPollution?

Let's find out…

1/
As of Christmas Eve, the official number of Covid deaths in London *in hospitals* was 8,290. data.london.gov.uk/dataset/corona…

And according to that source, approximately 75% of Covid deaths occur in hospitals, which gives us a total number of Covid deaths in London of 11,053.

2/
The 2015 King's College London report on Air Pollution put annual deaths from PM2.5 at 3,537 and from NO2 at 5,879. (This is after accounting for a 30% overlap between the effects of PM2.5 and NO2.)

london.gov.uk/sites/default/…

So 9,416 annual London air pollution deaths.

3/
Read 13 tweets
Sep 18, 2020
Here we go… Image
Can't get the damn lid off.
Ok, I'm in. But they've got a weird yellow mould on them. Might give these a swerve after all.
Read 4 tweets
Jul 2, 2020
#HTML & #CSS are not programming. A thread…
While CSS and HTML are not a programming language as such, being able to masterfully craft things with them requires a level of logical and creative thinking which is perhaps in some ways harder than "proper" programming. Let me explain…
A programming language tends to have very clear logic to allow "if X, do Y" type things. HTML & CSS also allow you to define "if X, do Y" type things, but through a nightmarish abstraction of a nested document tree and some declarations about how the things in that tree behave.
Read 11 tweets
Feb 16, 2020
After many years, I recently ditched @googlechrome and switched back to @firefox, and it's wonderful. So wonderful in fact, that I feel compelled to tweet about it.

Here are some of the things that I love about it…
Firstly, you can send a tab to your phone (or vice versa), which is really handy.

I'm sure Chrome used to have this, and then they scrapped it 🤷‍♂️
Secondly, the "awesome bar". Remember the awesome bar? It's like Chrome's address bar but provides waaay better suggestions from your history.

That article you read last week… about carrots, but you can't recall the title or the site it was on 🤔.The awesome bar will find it.
Read 13 tweets
Feb 9, 2020
No.

A voting system needs to be inspect-able by members of general public. For an electronic system that means everything including the hardware, operating system, how/who that OS is installed (by), the interface software, data transfer & storage all must be open to scrutiny.
I've worked as a programmer for 10 years, and I wouldn't be competent at scrutinising all of those things.
If we gave every voter their own cryptographic key for voting, and they knew how to use it, then we could ignore most of the things in that^ list and just check the final data in the #blockchain. But I imagine such a requirement would hinder vast numbers of voters.
Read 8 tweets
Jan 26, 2020
Hi @OurWorldInData, this article of yours appears to contain 2 crucial mistakes/typos in one of its calculations [thread]

ourworldindata.org/food-choice-vs…
It says:

"Transporting food by boat emits 23 grams of CO2eq per kilogram of product per kilometer. To transport the 9000 kilometers from Central America to the UK therefore emits 0.27 kilograms CO2eq [9000km * 23g per tonne-kilometer / 1000 / 1000 = 0.27 kg CO2eq per kg].”
The calculation doesn't match the description. Is it 23g of CO2eq per kg of product per *tonne* or per kilometre!

And either way, the result of the calculation isn't right. It would either be 0.207 kg, or 207kg, but not 0.27kg.
Read 4 tweets

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