Hindustan Times (Delhi)

DPPC to issue alert when air is at emergency levels

- Ritam Halder ritam.halder@hindustant­imes.com

POLLUTION CONCERNS Delhi govt tells Supreme Courtappoi­nted panel that it won’t wait for its instructio­ns to act as soon as air quality reaches the severe plus levels the next time

NEW DELHI: The next time Delhi’s air quality goes foul, the authoritie­s won’t wait for directions from the pollution panel EPCA to get into action.

The Delhi government said this in a review meeting of the graded response action plan (GRAP) conducted by t he Supreme Court-mandated Environmen­t Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority (EPCA) on Friday.

According to an environmen­t department official, after the air quality moved to the “severe plus” level on Thursday, Delhi chief secretary Anshu Prakash took meeting of senior officials of all government department­s.

“We are prepared. As soon as ‘severe plus’ comes again (for 48 hours), we will initiate action. We won’t even wait for any meeting. The Delhi Pollution Control Committee will issue an alert immediatel­y to all department­s concerned,” the official told the EPCA members.

The Sc-appointed appreciate­d the decision. “This an excellent move. If this becomes routine, then actually EPCA’S role in even sending directives should go out. It becomes something that happens automatica­lly… Hopefully by next year, we will be in a position that the moment it reaches severe plus, these emergency actions are taken,” EPCA member Sunita Narain said.

Theepcaont­hursdayhad on Thursday written to the Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Rajasthan government­s to gear up for another round of tough measures under the “emergency” category of the graded plan keeping in mind the rising pollution levels.

Under the GRAP, pollution is considered ‘severe plus’ or ‘emergency’ when the reading of ultrafine particulat­es PM2.5 or PM10 are above 300 and 500 ug/m3, respective­ly.

On Thursday, at 2pm, the PM2.5 readings had touched 320.9 ug/m3, in the emergency levels, while the PM10 levels were just short of the danger mark at 498 ug/m3.

Measures listed under the emergency category are rolled out when these conditions prevail for 48 hours at a stretch.

On Friday, however, air quality got improved and became ‘very poor’ and so no new measure is being put in place, at the moment. Delhi police was asked to have better liaison with Haryana and Uttar Pradesh to regulate the movement of trucks.

 ?? BURHAAN KINU/ HT PHOTO ?? No new emergency measure will be taken now as air quality improved on Friday.
BURHAAN KINU/ HT PHOTO No new emergency measure will be taken now as air quality improved on Friday.

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