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Poland has united to cut back on coal. This activist led the way.

Poland produces – and consumes – the lion’s share of the coal that the European Union uses to stay warm in winter. And when consumed, the coal results in clouds of particulate matter that contain probable carcinogens such as benzopyrene and clog the lungs. 

Angry and alarmed for her children’s well-being, Anna Dworakowska rallied other young parents like her around an awareness-raising campaign about smog. “We decided that either we move out of [Kraków], or we would try and fight for our air,” she says.

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Poland has been a historically large producer and consumer of coal for heating homes. Worried about the smog that results, one resident has united Poles to cut back on the fuel.

Their efforts would lead to the creation of Polish Smog Alert, a national movement that has pushed through groundbreaking initiatives for cleaner air and has shifted thinking in one of Europe’s most coal-dependent, polluted countries. And it helped make Kraków the first city in Poland to ban most coal heating.

“Anna forced the public administration in Kraków to set whole new laws connected to clean air goals,” says Maciej Fijak, a local district councilor in Kraków. The Smog Alert program is “the most successful story in Polish civil society action ever.”

Like most inhabitants of Kraków, Anna Dworakowska had never really questioned the smog.

The thick, orangey haze wraps her city, Poland’s second-largest, every winter. But she saw it as a part of the season. Nobody talked about it as anything abnormal.

But in 2012, Ms. Dworakowska’s husband, an environmental economist, showed her a scientific paper that shocked her. It said that Kraków was the European Union’s third-most-polluted city. Even more shocking, she says, was the culprit. The pollution came not from cars or industry, but from a quintessentially Polish habit: heating homes with coal.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Poland has been a historically large producer and consumer of coal for heating homes. Worried about the smog that results, one resident has united Poles to cut back on the fuel.

Poland both produces and consumes the lion’s share of the coal that the EU uses to stay warm in winter – as much as 80%. And when consumed, it results in clouds of particulate matter that contain probable carcinogens such as benzopyrene and clog the lungs, making Poland into the EU country with the highest coal-related health costs. Hundreds of Cracovians have died prematurely as a result, according to several clean-air research groups, including the European Respiratory Society in Lausanne, Switzerland.

Angry and alarmed for her children’s well-being, Ms. Dworakowska rallied other young parents like her around an awareness-raising campaign about smog. “We decided that either we move out of the city, or we would try and fight for our air,” she says. Their efforts would lead to the creation of Polish Smog Alert, a national movement that has pushed through groundbreaking initiatives for cleaner air and shifted thinking in one of Europe’s most coal-dependent, polluted countries. And it helped make Kraków the first city in Poland to ban most coal heating.

Isabelle de Pommereau

Anna Dworakowska’s efforts helped lead to the creation of Polish Smog Alert.

“Anna forced the public administration in Kraków to set whole new laws connected to clean air goals,” says Maciej Fijak, a local district councilor in Kraków. The Smog Alert program is “the most successful story in Polish civil society action ever.”

A “smoke awakening”

Until 2012, Ms. Dworakowska had been working as an English teacher and translator specializing in environmental protection issues. But the revelation about Kraków’s self-inflicted smog problem shifted her course toward environmental activism.

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