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World Economic Forum – Global Action!
Call for Open Action
The World Economic Forum has publicly issued an appeal for global action to combat indoor air pollution—a topic that Marquis Intelligence has been actively addressing for years, with a special focus on its impact on health, daily functioning, and long-term consequences.
Air pollution is often invisible, but its effects are deeply felt. Every day. In our bodies. In our healthcare systems. Today, air pollution is no longer a topic reserved for scientific circles. Leading authorities from science, business, and politics are engaging in dialogue about its effects.
>>SEE ALSO: Clean air – luxury or necessity?
World Economic Forum Sounds the Alarm
According to the World Economic Forum report, indoor air pollution is linked to 3.2 million premature deaths each year.
Why indoors, not outdoors?
Because we spend 60 to 90% of our time indoors.
And yet, regulations permit significantly higher concentrations of pollutants in indoor air compared to outdoor air.
According to Harvard University research, people spend on average 65% of their lives in their homes.
If you are lucky enough to live to 80, that means 55 years spent indoors.
The average person inhales about 12,000 litres of air per day—more than 10,000 litres of which are inhaled indoors.
That’s why Harvard emphasises: most exposure to outdoor air pollution happens indoors.
While outdoor air pollution is widely discussed, indoor air is dangerously neglected – both in regulation and public discourse.
Yet it is the closest to our health.
“If we spend most of our lives indoors, then the air we breathe there must be safe.”
– World Economic Forum, June 2025
Harvard: Scientific Evidence Must Be Applied
At the panel “Breathing Easier: The Pursuit of Clean Air”, organised by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, many long-discussed claims in expert circles were confirmed:
- Indoor pollutants contribute to neurological disorders, mental illness, and reduced cognitive abilities.
- There is a link to fertility issues and pregnancy complications.
- Children and the elderly are the most vulnerable, due to weaker physiological barriers and more prolonged exposure.
Harvard researchers are unequivocal: air quality is a matter of social justice, equity, and public health.
Professor Joseph Allen, director of the Healthy Buildings Program, emphasises:
“The person who manages your building has a greater impact on your health than your doctor.”
– Professor Joseph Allen, director of the Healthy Buildings Program,
>>SEE ALSO: Air pollution and cancer – new scientific insights
>>SEE ALSO: PM2.5 particles threaten the heart and cardiovascular system
What is Marquis Intelligence Doing?
At a time when the world is just discovering the scale of the problem, Marquis Intelligence already has developed solutions—not just theoretical, but applied and proven in practice:
- Integrated ventilation systems with heat recovery and high-level air purification
- Advanced air purification technologies, using both conventional and unconventional methods
- Automatic regulation of air quality based on sensor control
- Educating clients and partners, because everyone has a right to information—as well as to clean air
Marquis Intelligence does not wait for regulation—it always stays one step ahead.
Measured, verified, and technically precise in application.
That is why this company already has decades of experience with systems that provide healthy air to users.
Indoor Air Quality Is a Priority
When global authorities openly call for action, responsible actors do not remain silent.
Marquis Intelligence has been implementing solutions for decades to improve indoor air quality—in residential, commercial, and public buildings.
Clean air is not a luxury, but a fundamental human right.
Sources:
- World Economic Forum: Why indoor air quality must be a global health priority (2025)
- Harvard Healthy Buildings Program: forhealth.org
- EPA – Inside Story on Indoor Air Quality: epa.gov/iaq