Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Urbanisati­on punches holes in India’s fog cover

- Snehal Fernandes snehal.fernandes@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: The high level of local pollution is burning the fog over cities in the Indo-Gangetic Plains (IGP), with Delhi recording the maximum “fog holes” during winter, a study that analysed 17 years of satellite data from NASA shows.

The paper ‘Urban Heat Island over Delhi punches Holes in Widespread Fog in the IndoGanget­ic Plains’ by the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT-B) and University of Petroleum and Energy Studies, Dehradun, was published in the journal Geophysica­l Research Letters by the American Geophysica­l Union on January 8.

The researcher­s said this is the first study that shows the direct impact and evidence of urban hotspots in fog globally, and specifical­ly over Delhi.

The two-member team found more than 90 occurrence­s of fog holes in Delhi, where the incidence of fog has dipped by over 50% between 2006 and 2016.

The area covers more than 700 square kilometres making it the largest in terms of frequency and extent as compared to the Po Valley in Italy, north China plains and California’s Central Valley, which experience similar phenomena.

With land surface temperatur­es over Delhi recor- ded at around 4-5 °C higher compared to its rural surroundin­gs, researcher­s said the formation of urban heat islands burns the base of the fog layer during mid-morning.

The urban heat island is a phenomenon in which the heat gets trapped near the earth’s surface as a result of a decline in green cover, rapid urbanisati­on, energy-intensive activities, and concrete structures.

For instance, vegetation cover in rural areas surroundin­g Delhi is more than 65% compared to the city. “Relative humidity, which should be about 95%, is a key factor for fog formation. When surface temperatur­es increase due to urban heat island effect, there is a decrease in relative humidity which is not conducive to form fog droplets,” lead investigat­or and senior physical scientist at Washington’s Environmen­tal Defense Fund, Ritesh Gautam, said.

“High humidity levels are important since the air has to be saturated enough with vapour so that it can condense on pollutants or particles in the air to form fog near the ground,” Gautam, a former IITB professor, added.

Delhi witnessed more than a 50% decrease in fog cover. Between 2008 and 2016, the city recorded fog holes for 55 days, despite a20%increasein fogatadist­ance of 15km to 30km from the city centre during the study period.

The team also found a fourfold decrease in the thickness of the fog around the edges of the hole over Delhi as compared to its surroundin­g. Across the IGP that runs across 1,800km, there was a 17% to 36% decline in fog cover across Amritsar, Jalandhar, Patiala, Ludhiana and Lahore. These five cities had 24 to 32 days of fog holes.

Fog is an important climatic feature as it affects local vegetation and weather and fog mixed with pollutants create problems.

“Our study suggests that links between urbanisati­on and fog dynamics and its frequency should be assessed to better understand the relationsh­ips between fog, air pollution and urbanisati­on, and help advance the developmen­t of fog forecastin­g capabiliti­es,” said Gautam.

Increasing urbanisati­on may make fog rarer, but there could be some benefits from the change.

“We have a situation where fog is getting amplified by air pollution but urbanisati­on is decreasing fog. As more urban cities come up, we won’t be able to see the fog but will see holes. However, the fog over Delhi and other places is so notorious that may be urbanisati­on is helping to keep the polluted fog intensity over Delhi low,” said Gautam.

We have a situation where fog is getting amplified by air pollution but urbanisati­on is decreasing fog. As more urban cities come up, we won’t be able to see the fog but will see holes...

RITESH GAUTAM, Lead investigat­or

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