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Recently, the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) warned that pollution will rebound if stronger action is not sustained and scaled up.
Current Situation
- The rate at which urban air pollution has grown across India is alarming, the toxic web of air quality fails to meet health-based standards.
- Particulate matters, SoX, NoX and other air toxins are responsible for this.
- Medium and small-sized towns and cities are witnessing a phenomenal spurt in pollution as severe as or more than any megacity.
- The key highlight is that the springtime – January to March, when pollution level begins to subside after winter, PM2.5 this year has recorded the highest seasonal levels compared to the corresponding period in preceding years including the normal year of 2019.
Facts from CSE
- Status: While the number of days in severe and severe-plus categories has stabilized in 2020, the number of days in the very poor category has increased this year.
- Drop-in PM 2.5: There has been a substantial drop in PM2.5 levels during both the hard lockdown phases in March to May in 2020 and April-June, 2021 with nearly similar levels evoking imagery of blue sky, t
- Year-wise variations: Longer-term PM2.5 levels have stabilized and are downward – but seasonal variation is high: Spring (January to March) acts as a transitional period between the two extremes – winter and summer. There was a 26 per cent drop between the winter of 2018 and spring of 2019. In 2020 this drop increased to 36 per cent due to pollution control measures in place and also the imposition of partial lockdowns in March 2020. But this downward trend in spring pollution did not continue this year, with a seasonal drop limited to 18 per cent. In fact, spring this year has been 31 per cent dirtier than 2020 and 8 per cent dirtier than 2019.
- Lockdown with a difference: Lockdowns were effective in bringing down PM2.5 levels this year as well. But given the shorter duration and lesser stringency of lockdowns this year PM2.5 levels are not as low as the summer of 2020. The monthly average level of PM2.5 in April and May 2021 – the hard lockdown phase, was higher than the corresponding levels in April-May, 2020, – also a hard lockdown phase.
- Varying pattern of hard lockdown phase and semi-lockdown phase of 2020 and 2021: This year restriction in form of night-curfews and weekend lockdowns started on April 6 with complete lockdown being imposed on April 19. Imposition of partial-lockdown lowered PM2.5 levels by 20 per cent, the complete lockdown brought the average down by a further 12 per cent.
- Behaviour of pollution hotspots during lockdowns: If we look at places that reported relatively higher PM2.5 levels during the lockdown this year, the hotspots (old and new) occupy the top of the list without exception. Further, 21 out of 43 stations that have data for both lockdowns show improvement in PM2.5 levels.
- Rebound Effect: There would be a rebound effect with a full opening of the economy and intensification of traffic. Action may have slowed down during the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. But this has to gather momentum now to prevent a rebound effect.
IQ Air’s Global Air Pollution Report
- The latest report was released in 2021.
- Published by a Swiss air quality technology company specialising in protection against airborne pollutants, and developing air quality monitoring and air cleaning products.
- It highlighted that Delhi is the most polluted capital city in the world.
- India is the 3rd most polluted country in the world.
- Of the 106 monitored countries, only 24 met the WHO’s annual guidelines for PM 2.5.
- The eight Indian cities in the top 10 list are — Bulandshahar, Bisrakh Jalalpur, Noida, Greater Noida, Kanpur, Lucknow (all in UP), Bhiwari in Rajasthan and Delhi.
Major Reasons for Pollution in India
- Transportation and vehicular emissions;
- biomass burning for cooking,
- electricity generation;
- Industry and construction;
- waste burning; and
- episodic agricultural burning.
Way Forward
- Improve air quality monitoring to include more pollutants and more areas in cities to assess the risk of air pollution, make appropriate policies to control it.
- The most recent attempt by CPCB to revise the ambient air quality standards will set a tighter benchmark for air quality. These standards will set new and tighter targets for air quality improvement in our cities – one uniform health-based standards for all land-use classes; tighter standards for sensitive areas; introduction of more short term standards, among others.
- India needs strong policy interventions to enable research in the field of air pollution.
- Health-based criteria should become the basis of air quality regulations. Only this can help break a business and political resistance to hard mitigation measures to combat air pollution.
- Efforts to create awareness amongst people about hard policy decisions.
World Environment Day 2021
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Sources: DTE
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