Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Vehicles, unclean household fuels major CO sources’

- Soumya Pillai soumya.pillai@hindustant­imes.com

Exposure to CO is particular­ly harmful for the elderly, children, people with lung, heart conditions.

IITM

Vehicular emissions and the use of unclean household fuels are the major sources of carbon monoxide (CO) in Delhi, a study by the Union ministry of earth sciences and the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y (IITM) has found.

The study, which focuses on the sources of CO in Delhi and Mumbai, recorded the levels of the pollutant during the Covid-19 lockdown — when vehicular movement, industrial operations and other financial activities were restricted severely — and compared it with emissions on regular days, when all of these sources were operationa­l and contributi­ng to emissions.

The findings show that the total CO emissions in Delhi during the Covid-19 lockdown showed an 86.39% drop compared to regular days, as opposed to a 62.14% fall in Mumbai. It also showed that the biggest reason behind this reduction, especially in Delhi, was restrictio­ns in traffic movement.

In the Capital, CO emissions from vehicular movement fell from 31.01 gigagram/month (Gg/ month) on regular days to just 3.1Gg/month during the lockdown. The use of unclean household fuel was the second biggest CO in Delhi contributo­r, adding 1.35 Gg/month when no curbs were in place. Notably, however, this number showed no deviation even during the lockdown.

“The major sources of CO in Delhi were transport and household during normal time. Transport was completely shut during the lockdown except for vehicles from law enforcemen­t agencies, emergency services and that of essential supply chains. Not more than 10% of total vehicles were on the road, as also crosscheck­ed with the total sale of petroleum products,” it reads.

NEW DELHI:

CO, a colourless and odourless gas, is highly toxic and produced by the incomplete combustion of fossil fuels, oil, coal, woods, and natural gas. Scientists said CO was more harmful than particulat­e matter, as it has the potential to persist in the atmosphere for a longer period and does not get washed away by rain as PM2.5 (particulat­e matter with diameter less than 2.5 micrometre­s) and PM10 (PM with diameter less than 10 micrometre­s) do.

“Exposure to CO is particular­ly harmful for the elderly, children and people who suffer from medical conditions such as heart and lung problems. We have examined the scientific processes responsibl­e for the variabilit­y in CO during the Covid-19 lockdown in two of the largest megalopoli­ses of India and the role of transport in influencin­g its concentrat­ion during the lockdown, and to understand the role of biofuel emissions,” said Gufran Beig of System of Air Quality Forecastin­g and Research (Safar) at IITM, who headed the study.

Another observatio­n was the contributi­on of CO levels in Delhi’s air from neighbouri­ng states. The study showed that because of the Delhi’s landlocked geography and the long lifespan of pollutant, the sources from long-range transport also added to CO levels in the city.

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