
Visualised by Shamil Kalimulaev, this home design is born from a journey of self-exploration. The designer’s own tastes and desires have shaped an …
Interior Design, Simplicity, And Self Exploration

Visualised by Shamil Kalimulaev, this home design is born from a journey of self-exploration. The designer’s own tastes and desires have shaped an …
Interior Design, Simplicity, And Self Exploration

Hippie Decor: The best furnishing accessories to give your home a hippie touch! The hippie movement was born in the United States during the 1960s, at a time of great social, political and cultural crisis. It inherited the values of the Beat Generation, creating a counterculture, a radical general transformation… The concept of transformation also […]
Hippie Decor — Hygge Design
National Clean Air Day is on the 21st June, 2021. Let’s protect our children’s health from air pollution this #CleanAirDay on 17 June 2021.

Every year, air pollution causes up to 36,000 deaths in the UK. The World Health Organisation and the UK Government recognise that air pollution is the largest environmental health risk we face today. Poor air quality causes heart and lung diseases, is linked to low birth weight and children’s lung development and may even contribute to mental health issues.
Clean Air Day is the UK’s largest air pollution campaign, engaging thousands of people at hundreds of events, and reaching millions more through the media. This year Clean Air Day is taking place on 17 June 2021.

Led by Global Action Plan, Clean Air Day brings together communities, businesses, schools and the health sector to:
15 April 2021 – Sustainability charity Global Action Plan, which co-ordinates Clean Air Day, today launches this year’s resources ahead of the 17 June campaign. The 2021 resources enable all audiences across the UK from individuals, schools, businesses, health organisations, community groups and local authorities to demonstrate support for action on air pollution and have their say about building a healthy future for our children.
The resources support ‘do and say’ actions in line with this year’s Clean Air Day theme: ‘protect our children’s health from air pollution’. Such actions include grassroots behaviour asks such as going polluting-vehicle free, to supporting high-level council action.
Specific actions include:
This year’s theme ‘protect our children’s health from air pollution’ was selected to highlight the urgency to safeguard our children’s health from the impacts of air pollution as we recover from the pandemic and look to build a clean air future.
Air pollution impacts us all from our first breath to our last, but children are at higher risk to both the short-and longer-term impacts of air pollution. Poor air quality impacts their health, lung development, and even their ability to learn and for the first time, there is evidence that air pollution caused the death of nine-year-old Ella Kissi-Debrah following the recent landmark ruling.
2020 also further saw children bear the burden of COVID-19, impacting their freedom, education and mental wellbeing. As children return to their lives the charity says cleaner air is imperative for them to walk and cycle to school safely and learn and play in healthy spaces.