Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Three NCR cities among country’s five most polluted

- Joydeep Thakur joydeep.thakur@htlive.com CONTINUED ON P 8

NEW DELHI: Three cities from the National Capital Region — Ghaziabad, Gurgaon and Delhi — were among India’s five most polluted cities last year, the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), the country’s apex pollution monitoring and control body, said on Wednesday.

Ghaziabad, with an average air quality index (AQI) of 258, topped the list. Gurgaon was close behind with an AQI of 247, and Delhi ranked fourth at 228. Noida, Faridabad and Alwar — other heavily polluted cities in the NCR — ranked 8th, 11th and 12th. The CPCB rated Thiruvanan­thapuram as the city with the cleanest air with an AQI of 64.

The list was prepared based on annual average Air Quality Index values from 51 cities across India in 2017. According to the CPCB report published with the list, an AQI of 0-50 is “good”, 51-100 is “satisfacto­ry”, 101-200 is “moderate”, and 201-300 is “poor”. In November, the AQI in Delhi was above 400, or “severe”, for a week. The city was enveloped in a toxic haze that forced authoritie­s to take drastic measures such as closing schools, hiking parking charges and declaring a public health emergency.

“The cities of north India are all landlocked,” said D Saha, the head of the air quality laboratory at CPCB. “Air quality in these cities depends heavily on weather conditions. If the wind is strong and it gets a clear passage and ventilatio­n then pollution level drops. The entire Indo-gangetic plain is prone to dust pollution.”

Mukesh Khare, a professor of environmen­tal engineerin­g at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, suggested “unplanned urban sprawl” was also to blame for the tendency of pollutants in the capital not to be flushed out by wind.

Anybody who spoils communal harmony will not be tolerated... We will not spare anyone.

SIDDARAMAI­AH,

Karnataka chief minister

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India