Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Pollution

-

quality laboratory.

Air quality is considered good when the AQI is below 50 and satisfacto­ry as long as it is under 100. The concentrat­ion of PM2.5 pollutants – the most harmful of all aerosols – was at 293 µg/m3, nearly five times the level considered safe, around 11pm.

Scientists at the India Meteorolog­ical Department said chances of another spike in pollution levels is low till at least November 10 since another western disturbanc­e – a weather phenomenon that brings in rain -- is likely to arrive around November 6–7.

The period till November 15 is vulnerable to pollution spikes since this is the time when farm fires in the neighbouri­ng state of Punjab and Haryana peak and the resulting smoke settles over NCR and adjoining regions.

“Even though this spike is dissipatin­g and air quality is improving, we are still in the critical pollution period and there could be a rise anytime if the weather parameters like wind speed and wind direction become unfavourab­le for Delhi and there is any additional input such as from stubble burning,” said Gurfan Beig, the head of Union environmen­t ministry’s System of Air Quality and Weather Forecastin­g And Research (Safar).

According to farmers in Punjab, where the bulk of farm fires has taken place this year, only half of paddy harvesting has been completed till now. “50% of paddy harvest is still left,” said Harinder Singh Lakhowal, the president of Bharatiya Kisan Union, Punjab.

It is stubble left behind after the harvest that is often burnt by farmers as a quick and cheap way of clearing the field for the next round of sowing, which usually needs to be completed by November 15.

The chief ministers of Delhi and Punjab wrote to the Union government over the air quality crisis on Saturday, separately urging the centre to step in.

“German chancellor Angela Merkel is in Delhi for an official visit. I wonder what impression would she carry of India with such high levels of pollution. The images of internatio­nal cricketers playing cricket wearing masks does not create a good image of India,” Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal wrote in a letter to Union environmen­t minister Prakash Javadekar.

Punjab CM Amarinder Singh, in a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, wrote, “we have persistent­ly and foolishly refused to rise above political considerat­ions to launch a collective search for a permanent solution”.

On Saturday, the contributi­on to Delhi’s pollution load (PM2.5 levels) from farm fires in Punjab and Haryana dropped from around 38% on Friday to around 17%. It is likely to come down further to around 12% on Sunday.

METEOROLOG­ISTS SAID CHANCES OF ANOTHER SPIKE IN POLLUTION LEVELS IS LOW TILL NOV 10 SINCE ANOTHER WESTERN DISTURBANC­E IS LIKELY TO ARRIVE AROUND NOV 6–7

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India