- Li, Chi;
- van Donkelaar, Aaron;
- Hammer, Melanie;
- McDuffie, Erin;
- Burnett, Richard;
- Spadaro, Joseph;
- Chatterjee, Deepangsu;
- Cohen, Aaron;
- Southerland, Veronica;
- Anenberg, Susan;
- Brauer, Michael;
- Martin, Randall;
- Apte, Joshua
Ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is the worlds leading environmental health risk factor. Quantification is needed of regional contributions to changes in global PM2.5 exposure. Here we interpret satellite-derived PM2.5 estimates over 1998-2019 and find a reversal of previous growth in global PM2.5 air pollution, which is quantitatively attributed to contributions from 13 regions. Global population-weighted (PW) PM2.5 exposure, related to both pollution levels and population size, increased from 1998 (28.3 μg/m3) to a peak in 2011 (38.9 μg/m3) and decreased steadily afterwards (34.7 μg/m3 in 2019). Post-2011 change was related to exposure reduction in China and slowed exposure growth in other regions (especially South Asia, the Middle East and Africa). The post-2011 exposure reduction contributes to stagnation of growth in global PM2.5-attributable mortality and increasing health benefits per µg/m3 marginal reduction in exposure, implying increasing urgency and benefits of PM2.5 mitigation with aging population and cleaner air.