Delhi’s air pollution reaches ‘unbearable levels’

Published November 4, 2019
Women worship the Sun deity amid floating foam in the Yamuna River on Sunday.—Reuters
Women worship the Sun deity amid floating foam in the Yamuna River on Sunday.—Reuters

NEW DELHI: India’s capital New Delhi was enveloped in heavy, toxic smog on Sunday — the worst levels in recent years — with flights diverted or delayed as politicians blamed each other for failing to tackle the crisis.

Every winter, the megacity of 20 million people is blanketed by a poisonous smog of car fumes, industrial emissions and smoke from stubble burning at farms in neighbouring states.

Concentrations of particles measuring less than 2.5 microns hit the highest level of this season, exacerbated by light rains late on Saturday, India’s state-run System of Air Quality Weather Forecasting and Research (SAFAR) said.

The reading for pollutants in the atmosphere hit 810 micrograms per cubic metre on Sunday morning, beyond the “hazardous” zone according to the US embassy in Delhi, which independently monitors pollution levels.

The recommended World Health Organisation safe daily maximum is 25.

“Pollution has reached unbearable levels,” Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal tweeted Sunday.

Visibility was so poor that major carriers Air India and Vistara said flights were being delayed or diverted to and from Delhi’s airports.

Some cricket players and coaches have also been training in masks ahead of the Twenty20 international between Bangladesh and India later on Sunday.

“It’s actually scary — you can’t see things in front of you,” protester Jaivipra said at a rally in Delhi on Sunday calling for politicians to do more to curb pollution.

Nurses at the demonstration said they were seeing more people suffering from respiratory problems.

“Patients are coming with more lung and respiratory diseases, like more (are) affected with asthma,” Reshma C.M. said.

The conditions sparked a blame game between state and federal politicians over who was responsible for the conditions, which authorities said on Friday reached “emergency” levels.

In a tweet last week, Kejriwal called on the state governments of neighbouring Punjab and Haryana to take action.

“Delhi has turned into a gas chamber due to smoke from crop burning in neighbouring states,” he tweeted.

Federal Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar accused Kejriwal of politicising the issue and presenting the two states “in a bad light and as villains”.

Schools in Delhi have already been ordered closed until Tuesday, and construction halted From Monday there will be an odd/even car licence plate scheme to cut traffic.

Global non-profit Vital Strategies’ senior vice president for environmental health, Daniel Kass, said while temporary curbs were helpful, they had limited impact over time.

“They are insufficient to address the most important aspect of air pollution, which is what people live with day-to-day,” Kass said.

He said a range of measures needed to be imposed at local and national levels for air quality to improve.

Published in Dawn, November 4th, 2019

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