Air Pollution
Delhi’s Air Pollution: Air Quality Index Reaches To Severe Plus Level, May Worsen As Stubble Burning Increases
On November 22, 25 active monitoring stations of Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and the Central Pollution Control Board recorded “severe plus” or “emergency” Air Quality Index at Delhi Technical University in north Delhi, Anand Vihar in east Delhi and Ghaziabad
Highlights
- On November 22, Punjabi Bagh in west Delhi recorded
- Temperature and wind speed will drop due to which their will be fog: Met
- Satellite images shows increase in stubble burning in Haryana, UP, Punjab
New Delhi: With stubble burning increasing in neighbouring states and wind speed dropping, air quality in Delhi and NCR worsened further on Wednesday (November 22) with all active monitoring stations of SAFAR now recording “very poor” air quality. According to the experts from Supreme Court-appointed Environment Pollution Control Authority (EPCA), the air quality may deteriorate further as fog formation is likely due to drop in temperature and lowering of wind speed towards November 23 and 24.
“Met has predicted that temperature and the wind speed will drop due to which their will be fog in the region. This may increase the air pollution, however the air quality will not reach the severe plus or emergency levels,” Usman Naseem, researcher at the Centre for Science and Environment and member of the EPCA, told IANS.
On Wednesday, 25 active monitoring stations of Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) recorded “severe plus” or “emergency” Air Quality Index (AQI) at Delhi Technical University (DTU) in north Delhi, Anand Vihar in east Delhi and Ghaziabad.
Punjabi Bagh in west Delhi recorded “severe” air quality while all remaining 21 stations recorded “very poor” AQI at 7 p.m. The monitoring agencies however abstained from proving the hourly index values of AQI, rather proving only concentration of the major pollutant PM2.5 and PM10, or particles with diameter less than 2.5 and 10 micrometers.
At 7 p.m., the PM2.5 value at Ghaziabad was recorded at 322, at Anand Vihar, it was 341 and at DTU, it was 310 — 12 to 13 times higher than the safe limits as per international standards.
Weather analysts said that due to the low-speed northerly and northwesterly winds entering the national capital from Punjab and Haryana, the national capital and the surrounding regions are likely to inhale toxins for a few more days more.
External emissions do have the impact on the air quality though it’s difficult to access the percentage, A. Sudhakar, Member Secretary of the CPCB, told IANS.
According to the System of Air Quality and Weather Forecasting and Research (SAFAR), the air quality of Delhi-NCR is likely to worsen over the next three days, with share of average PM2.5 set to increase from 154 on Wednesday to 163 on Thursday and 183 after three days. The average PM2.5 in Delhi-NCR according to SAFAR was recorded at 146 on Tuesday.
As per SAFAR, all its nine active monitoring station including Dhirpur, Pitampura, Delhi University in north Delhi, Pusa and Lodhi Road in central Delhi, Mathura Road, Ayanagar in south Delhi, Noida and Gurugram had PM2.5 readings ranging between 307 to 344.
Meanwhile, satellite images from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) on Tuesday showed further stepping up of stubble burning in parts of Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and almost all districts of Punjab.
This came even as the National Green Tribunal on Wednesday ordered the Delhi government and the neighbouring states to come out with a “definitive workable solution” against it. The green court also ordered the Union Agriculture Ministry to hold a meeting with the states including Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajashtan on the issue on November 28.