Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Minimum temperatur­e dips to 2°C as cold spell persists

- Prasun Sonwalkar Prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com

Delhi woke up to a shivering, foggy and polluted morning on Thursday with the mercury falling down to 2 degrees Celsius, five below the season’s normal, and the air entering the “severe” zone.

On Thursday, the minimum temperatur­e at the Safdarjung observator­y, considered the official marker for the city, was 2°C. The maximum temperatur­e was 19.2°C, one degree below what is considered to be normal for this time of the year. At the Palam

NEW DELHI:

and Lodhi Road weather stations, the minimum temperatur­es were 4.9°C and 2.4°C respective­ly.

According to the regional weather forecastin­g centre of the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD), severe cold wave conditions will continue in Delhi till January 18. It has forecast a respite after that due to a change in wind direction.

Meanwhile, as cold wave conditions continued in the city, the air quality continued to deteriorat­e on Thursday, with the overall air quality index (AQI) in Delhi touching 429, in the “severe” zone, according to the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB). This is the third time in the last fortnight that the AQI in Delhi had crossed the “severe” mark.

Union ministry of earth science’s air quality monitoring centre warned that the coming week could be the “first extended extreme air pollution event for 2021”.

The first Covid-19 lockdowns led to significan­t changes in urban air pollution levels in Delhi and other major cities around the world, but the changes were smaller than expected, a new study by an internatio­nal team of experts led by the University of Birmingham has concluded.

Published in ‘Science Advances’ on Thursday, the researcher­s evaluated changes in ambient NO2 (nitrogen dioxide), O3 (ozone) and fine particle (PM2.5) concentrat­ions arising from lockdown emission changes in 11 global cities: Beijing,

LONDON:

Wuhan, Milan, Rome, Madrid, London, Paris, Berlin, New York, Los Angeles and Delhi after developing new correction­s for the impact of weather and seasonal trends.

The experts discovered that the beneficial reductions in NO2 due to the lockdowns were smaller than expected, after removing the effects of weather. They also found in parallel that the lockdowns caused (weathercor­rected) concentrat­ions of ozone in cities to increase.

The scientists used machine learning to strip out weather impacts and seasonal trends before analysing the data: sitespecif­ic hourly concentrat­ions of key pollutants from December 2015 to May 2020.

The study also revealed that concentrat­ions of PM2.5, which can worsen medical conditions such as asthma and heart disease, decreased in all cities studied except London and Paris.

Lead-author Zongbo Shi of the University of Birmingham said: “Rapid, unpreceden­ted reduction in economic activity provided a unique opportunit­y to study the impact of interventi­ons on air quality. Emission changes associated with the early lockdown restrictio­ns led to abrupt changes in air pollutant levels but their impacts on air quality were more complex than we thought, and smaller than we expected.

“Weather changes can mask changes in emissions on air quality. Importantl­y, our study has provided a new framework for assessing air pollution interventi­ons, by separating the effects of weather and season from the effects of emission changes,” the expert added.

THE BENEFICIAL REDUCTIONS IN NO2 DUE TO CURBS WERE SMALLER THAN EXPECTED, AFTER REMOVING WEATHER IMPACT, THE STUDY FOUND

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