Pollutants dispersing in Delhi but air quality is still bad : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Pollutants dispersing in Delhi but air quality is still bad

NEW DELHI: The volume of pollutants markedly came down in Delhi on Saturday with their rapid dispersion caused by a strong wind movement, a day after Diwali.

Pollutants dispersing in Delhi but air quality is still bad

Among the station maintained by the CPCB, nine out of 17 were in the ‘very poor’ category, while the rest recorded ‘severe’ air quality. PTI



New Delhi, October 21

The volume of pollutants markedly came down in Delhi on Saturday with their rapid dispersion caused by a strong wind movement, a day after Diwali fireworks pushed the city’s air quality into the ‘severe’ zone for the first time this year.

The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), which attributed Friday’s high pollution levels to calm wind movement and a low mixing height (where air and suspended particles mix), said the situation would improve further by Sunday if favourable conditions prevailed.

“The wind speed is expected to pick up and reach up to 9 km/hour, which is adequate enough for the dispersion of suspended particulates. On Friday and Thursday, wind speed and mixing height were extremely low, which led to the rapid build-up of pollutants near the surface,” Dipankar Saha, CPCB’s air lab head, told PTI.

(Follow The Tribune on Facebook; and Twitter @thetribunechd)

The improvement was captured by the pollution monitoring stations. Six out of the eight stations maintained by SAFAR (System of Air Quality Forecasting and Research), an agency under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, had air quality index (AQI) in the ‘very poor’ category, a shade better than ‘severe’.

Among the station maintained by the CPCB, nine out of 17 were in the ‘very poor’ category, while the rest recorded ‘severe’ air quality.

A ‘very poor’ AQI comes with the warning that people may develop respiratory illness on prolonged exposure while exposure to ‘severe’ air affects healthy people and seriously impacts those with existing respiratory or cardiovascular diseases.

At 12 pm, the 24-hour rolling average of PM2.5 and PM10, ultra-fine particulates, which are up to 30 times tinier than the width of a human hair, were 206 and 357 microgrammes per cubic metre (ug/m3) respectively, as against Friday’s 407 and 595.

Their 24-hour safe standards are 60 and 100 and anything beyond that is considered harmful as these particles enter the respiratory system and can manage to reach the bloodstream, causing irreparable damage to humans and animals.

Diwali fireworks left Delhi gasping on Friday as night-long bursting of firecrackers despite a Supreme Court ban on their sale had plunged the air quality into the ‘severe’ zone for the first time this year.

Pollution in Delhi breached emergency levels on the Diwali night and the air quality worsened the day after, but compared to last year’s post-Diwali period, the city is relatively better off, the pollution monitoring agencies concurred in their reports on Friday.

The CPCB, the country’s apex pollution regulator, had on Friday recorded an air quality index (AQI) of 403 in Delhi, 402 in Noida and 412 in Ghaziabad, all in the severe zone, or the most polluted category, on October 20.

In a direct indicator of the impact of firecrackers, the SO2 (sulphur dioxide) levels that otherwise remained very low in the region, had increased by more than three times in several locations, including RK Puram, Shadipur and Punjabi Bagh on October 19, the Centre for the Science and Environment (CSE) said.

Delhi Environment Minister Imran Hussain had reviewed the situation during a meeting here on Friday. The government had issued a statement following the meeting, saying major changes in the level of pollutants were observed after 8 pm on Thursday when the fireworks started.

On Friday, the US Embassy’s pollution monitor recorded ‘hazardous’ air quality with the index scoring an alarming 878, which the mission considers “beyond its air quality index (AQI), which ends at 500”.

But unlike previous years, the run-up to Diwali festivities was much cleaner this time.

Even the Diwali evening was relatively quiet and promising, suggesting that the ban on sale of firecrackers in the Delhi-NCR region imposed by the apex court had worked.

As the clock ticked, frenzied celebrations picked up and noisy and relentless bursting of firecrackers continued till the wee hours, sending the pollution graph off the charts.

The Supreme Court-appointed Environment Pollution Prevention and Control Authority (EPCA), which is empowered to enforce the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) to combat air pollution in Delhi-NCR, kicked off a series of preventive measures on October 17.

Measures under the GRAP’s ‘very poor’ and ‘severe’ categories, which include a ban on diesel generator sets, have come into effect and will remain in force till March 15. PTI

Top News

Supreme Court seeks clarification from EC on functioning of EVMs, summons senior poll panel official

Supreme Court seeks clarification from EC on functioning of EVMs, summons senior poll panel official

Deputy Election Commissioner Nitesh Vyas had earlier given p...

AAP's Sanjay Singh accuses BJP of flip-flop on spectrum allocation

AAP Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Singh accuses BJP of flip-flop on spectrum allocation

Says spectrum allocation and licensing should be auctioned

IED explosion damages bridge in ethnic violence-hit Manipur’s Kangpokpi; traffic hit

IED explosion damages bridge in ethnic violence-hit Manipur’s Kangpokpi; traffic hit

Explosion occurs hours after gunfights broke out between vil...


Cities

View All