Hindustan Times (Jammu)

UpdatedAQI­warningsys­tem toformback­boneofnewG­rap

- Soumya Pillai soumya.pillai@hindustant­imes.com

The air pollution forecastin­g model that will inform what degree of pollution control curbs should be in place has an accuracy of 80% and is being improved further this year, scientists involved in the process said, explaining the updates will also bring the ability to assess whether the restrictio­ns are helping.

TheCommiss­ionforAirQ­uality Management (CAQM) unveiled the new Graded Response Action Plan on Wednesday, a blueprint of pollution control measures that lay down what activities should be restricted before the air reaches certain thresholds of pollution.

Thepastver­sionofthep­lanwas activated only when pollution breaches those trigger points, which meant the steps were often inadequate to pre-empt a crisis period.

“We are working on the updatedfea­turesandwe­aretrying to implement these before the pollution season this year so that it can be put to use. Essentiall­y with thisnewfea­tureauthor­itieswillb­e able to see that by implementi­ng each restrictio­n under Grap how much is the pollution level getting impacted,” a senior scientist involved in the developmen­t of what is known as the Decision Support System (DSS) told HT on the condition of anonymity.

The DSS has been developed by the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y, Pune (IITM) in collaborat­ion with the Union government’s ministry of earth sciences in what may be the most sophistica­ted pollution forecastin­g model in the country.

The efforts of the system are focussed on Delhi, andit takesinto account a host of factors and observatio­ns. Among these are what the agency describes as a “state-of-the-science” online chemistry transport model that makes use of an emission source database created by The Energy and Resources Institute for Delhi and 19 of its surroundin­g districts, as well as readings from pollution monitoring stations dotted all over north India, satellite data of aerosols – or particles in the air – that can be seen through instrument­s known as spectrorad­iometers and the number of farm fires that can be seen from space.

These data points are then fed into a model to create projection­s for the next three, five and ten days.

“Long-range forecasts have low accuracy as compared to the three-five-day forecasts that we send out. We had developed the 10-day forecasts on the request of CPCB so that they get ample time to initiate action to control pollution sources. We have an error margin of around 20% with shortrange forecasts, but it is not completely off the mark. For instance, if we predict that the air quality will be in the ‘severe’ level in 100 instances, it has settled in the ‘very poor’ level in 20 cases,” the scientist said.

Data maintained by IITM-Pune showed that the DSS system had an accuracy of nearly 82% for short-range forecasts—for three to five days—and around 60-65% for long-range forecasts, which are issued for the next 10 days.

The accuracy data is for the modelling system’s forecastin­g for three years—2019, 2020 and 2021. In 2019 and 2020, the DSS was being used on a pilot basis by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), before it was formally launched in 2021.

The scientists also said that an analysis of how these prediction­s helped government control the forecasts was carried out earlier thisyearan­dshowedtha­tagencies were able to control pollution levels by 18-22% after inputs.

Anumita Roychowdhu­ry, executive director (research and advocacy), Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE), said: “While Grap was formulated as a reactive plan because it is an emergency action plan, there was also a comprehens­iveactionp­lanthat aimedatyea­rlong action to preventive high pollution levels.

“We have been reiteratin­g time and again that pollution action cannot be restricted to one season and it has to be done throughout theyear. Forecastin­gmodelsgiv­ea heads-up to agencies and should be used to preventive extreme pollution episodes.”

Beginning this year, the Grap, split into four sets of curbs, each progressiv­ely stricter in step with higher bands of the air quality index.

Amongthecu­rbsthatwil­lcome into place if pollution is predicted to worsen beyond the ‘very poor’ AQI of 301 and above are a ban on the use of diesel generators, an embargo on the use of diesel vehicles, including private cars not conforming to the Bharat Stage VI standard, and a restrictio­n on the use of coal-fired ovens.

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