Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Delhiairma­kesit unliveable: Sachs

Noted economist, climate change specialist says air pollution is worse than previously thought, poverty no excuse

- Malavika Vyawahare malavika.vyawahare@hindustant­imes.com n

The pathology of what is happening to the lungs tells us that people should not live in these conditions JEFFREY SACHS, Head, Earth Institute

Delhi’s “catastroph­ic” air pollution has made it an “unliveable city” and a “lack of clarity in government strategy” is to blame for bad air and greenhouse emissions not being tackled effectivel­y, Jeffrey Sachs, head of Columbia University’s Earth Institute in New York, said on Thursday.

Sachs, a speaker at the World Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Summit in the Capital, also spoke to HT on the sidelines of the event.

“This city is not liveable. You do not want to raise your children here,” Sachs said, adding that citing poverty as an excuse for not taking action against was unacceptab­le. “People really are suffering. They are developing lifelong illness, heart disease and lung disease,” he said.

Air pollution is a key theme at the three-day summit organised by TERI, which Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address on Friday. Delhi experience­s extremely poor air quality especially during the winter, when meteorolog­ical factors compound the man-made problem. Delhi’s air quality index (AQI) was consistent­ly in hazardous range (between 400 and 500) for two weeks last November. In 2017, the AQI was “good” or “satisfacto­ry” for less than 50 days in the year in Delhi. The year before there were only 24 such days.

“The evidence is that it (air pollution) is even worse than what we thought. Now the physiology of air pollution, the pathology of what is happening to the lungs tells us that people should not live in these conditions,” he said. “The problem is that the government doesn’t see clearly the alternativ­es,” Sachs said.

“There are alternativ­es now. It is possible to move rapidly towards low carbon energy, move towards electric vehicles. Everybody would feel relief if there was a clear monitored and accountabl­e strategy for deep transforma­tion.”

According to a study by the Internatio­nal Institute for Applied Systems Analysis and National Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Research Institute, about 60% of Delhi’s air pollution comes from outside Delhi. This is higher than what other estimates suggest.

Other experts on the air pollution panel on Thursday recommende­d taking a regional approach to the air pollution problem rather than narrowly focus on Delhi.

“Even if all the economic activity in Delhi was stopped it would still not meet WHO or Indian standards,” Markus Amann, a scientist with the Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, said.

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