Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Delhi gets satisfacto­ry air after 3 months

- HT Correspond­ent ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Delhi residents on Sunday were greeted with the cleanest air they have breathed in months after strong winds and moderate rain helped disperse pollutants, as the air quality touched “satisfacto­ry” levels after 91 days.

The 24-hour average Air Quality Index (AQI) reading, as calculated by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB)’s 4pm bulletin, was 90 on Sunday, placing it in the “satisfacto­ry” zone. This was an improvemen­t from Saturday’s 135 (moderate).

Scientists credited the improvemen­t in air quality to a western disturbanc­e. “The improvemen­t in air quality is due to a western disturbanc­e that had started in northern India on February 28 and moderate rainfall experience­d in Delhi NCR, Haryana, and Punjab,” said Kuldeep Srivastava, head of the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD)’s Regional Weather Forecastin­g Centre. Western disturbanc­e refers to moisture-heavy winds that blow in from over the Arabian Sea and parts of west Asia, which then precipitat­e as rain over the plains and as snow in the mountains in winter months. Srivastava added that apart from the rain, strong winds of 30-35 km per hour through Saturday also ensured that pollutants in the air were dispersed, consequent­ly improving the air quality. CPCB data appeared to confirm this.

Particulat­e matter dropped to safe limits in the Capital as the winds picked up by Saturday evening.

PM10 (particulat­e matter with diameter less than 10 micrometre­s) levels in Delhi, which were 243.3µg/m3 on February 26 at 11pm, dropped to 62.4 µg/m3 by 7pm on Sunday. The daily safe limit for PM10 is 100µg/m3. Similarly, PM2.5 (particulat­e matter with diameter less than 2.5 micrometre­s) levels started dropping from 129.1µg/m3 at 11pm on February 26 to 31.8µg/m3 on Sunday at 7pm, according to CPCB data. The daily safe limit for PM2.5 is 60µg/m3.

IMD said the Safdarjung Observator­y recorded 18.6 mm rainfall till 8.30am on Sunday while the weather stations at Palam and Lodhi Road gauged 15.4 mm and 19mm precipitat­ion respective­ly. The minimum temperatur­e was recorded at 14.4 degrees Celsius — two degrees above normal for this time of the season. The IMD has forecast mainly clear sky and shallow fog in the morning on Monday. The maximum and minimum temperatur­es are likely to settle around 28 and 13 degrees Celsius.

However, experts warned that the relief will is likely to be shortlived. The air quality is expected to deteriorat­e in the next few days in the absence of rainfall and a drop in wind speed, they said.

“The air quality was in ‘poor’ category all this while and it improved significan­tly today because of the rain. But from tomorrow (Monday) the temperatur­e is likely to go down and wind will be slower.

In view of this, the dispersion­s are expected to be less and local emissions will start getting accumulate­d, bringing the air quality to ‘moderate’ level by tomorrow and to ‘poor’ category the following day,” said an official from the System of Air Quality and Weather Forecastin­g and Research (SAFAR).

The air, however, is expected to improve from the evening of March 4 again as an active western disturbanc­e is likely to affect north India during March 4 to 6 when rain and thundersto­rm accompanie­d with hailstorm will occur over western Himalayan regions as well as plains of north west India.

Under the influence of the western disturbanc­e, rain accompanie­d by gusty wind and hailstorm is expected to occur over Delhi-NCR between the evening of March 5 and March 6, Srivastava said.

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