General view of high-rise buildings, UniCredit tower and Vertical Forest building, shrouded in smog in Milan, Italy, February 20, 2024. REUTERS/Claudia Greco
MILAN (Reuters) - Pietro De Luca lives in Italy's finance and fashion capital Milan but often thinks of moving to a cleaner city with his wife and three children to escape high pollution and the health risks it causes.
"It stinks! I smell a constant stench of smog, I cough, I feel my throat burning," said De Luca, who lives in a second floor apartment in Milan's eastern Città Studi district.
