Gulf Today

Delhi-ncr air quality still toxic

According to the satellite images from Nasa, the stubble burning in Delhi was seen at different spots of north Delhi, rather than earlier Narela and Tikri areas

-

NEW DELHI: While some regions across Delhi-ncr saw an improvemen­t in the air quality from “severe plus or emergency” to “severe” on Saturday, the national capital continues inhaling toxins with no respite likely for at least a week, oficials and experts said.

The stubble burning, which according to the farmers is in the last phase, however continued in Delhi for the third day and in Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh since last week.

According to the satellite images from Nasa, the stubble burning in Delhi on Saturday was seen at different spots of north Delhi, rather than earlier Narela and Tikri areas.

The speed of the north-westerly winds, which continue entering Delhi from Punjab and Haryana where stubble burning continues despite the National Green Tribunal directions, on Saturday went down leading to possibilit­y of worsening of the situation.

“For the coming week since the wind speed is low and temperatur­e drops, the pollution levels will increase and vary within being very poor... however chances of a severe-plus or emergency situation is unlikely,” Usman Naseem, researcher at the Centre for Science and Environmen­t and member of the EPCA, told IANS.

According to the Central Pollution Control Board, at 4 p.m., the Air Quality Index in Delhi on Saturday was 322 against 335 on Friday − both “very poor”, while on Thursday due to high-wind speed, AQI was 288 considered “poor”.

Anand Vihar in east Delhi, Delhi Technical University in north Delhi and Ghaziabad continued suffering a “severe” levels of the air pollution since last three days, with concentrat­ion of major pollutant PM2.5 or particles with diameter less the 2.5 micrometer­s, recorded above 300.

The System of Air Quality and Weather Forecastin­g and Research has predicted the air quality of Delhi-ncr to further worsen over the next three days, ten out of nine of its monitoring stations across NCR recorded a “very poor” air quality by 7 p.m, with PM2.5 ranging above 300.

The PM2.5 concentrat­ion ranged between 303 to 351 across Pitampura, and Delhi University in north Delhi, Lodhi Road and Pusa in central Delhi, Ayanagar and Mathura Road in south Delhi, Noida, Gurygram and IGI airport. The safe limit for PM2.5 is 25 microgramm­es per cubic meters as per internatio­nal standards and is 60 as per national standards.

“The air speed on Saturday has furher dropped. Towards November 28 and 29, the pollution levels are expected to rise due to mist or haze formation in Delhi-ncr,” Mahesh Palawat, director of private weather analysis agency Skymet, told IANS.

People come out on the streets in protest when it comes to ilms, but why are there no protests against lethal air and water pollution, award-winning wildlife ilmmaker Mike Pandey said on Saturday.

Pandey also said that wildlife documentar­ies were dying in India due to lack of funding.

“For change to take place, we must have partnershi­p with common people. Common people must come out too. There’s a ilm that is in a controvers­y. OK good enough, people have come out on the street.

“But why haven’t people come out on the streets against the poisoned air that we are breathing which is killing our young children, killing our senior citizens or lack of clean pure water,” he said in a media interactio­n on the sidelines of the 48th Internatio­nal Film Festival of India.

Pandey, who has won multiple awards for his wildlife documentar­ies, including the prestigiou­s Green Oscar, also said that there was no future in India for wildlife filmmakers, due to an absolute lack of funding.

 ?? Reuters ?? Boys play cricket on the banks of the Yamuna river in Delhi on Friday.
Reuters Boys play cricket on the banks of the Yamuna river in Delhi on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain