Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Changes show air pollution is not just a winter problem

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The Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y has said that both the periodicit­y and duration of dry spells in the country were rising as the total rainfall events in a year had fallen even though the average rainfall in a year has not changed much, a direct consequenc­e of climate change.

The annual average rainfall has remained the same because the frequency of heavy downpours (for example, the June 2013 flash floods in Uttarakhan­d) has increased in the past two decades.

During dry spells, the earth gets heated up and moisture in the atmosphere dips, creating depression­s that pull winds from the oceans. As there is less rain and the green barriers in and around cities have been destroyed, the winds lift dust and local emissions, causing a spurt in air pollution. Such events have been higher in 2018 -- a year of freaky weather that witnessed three killer thundersto­rms in May before this dust-laden westerly -because the average rainfall since November 2017 has been about 60% below normal.

The impact could have been substantia­lly reduced had government­s — the states and the Centre — made air pollution mitigation a round-the-clock exercise, and not restricted it to winter months, when the pollution is high. As a result, most of North India is covered under a veil of du- st haze with air pollution worse than that in the winter months.

Blaming only weather conditions would be a colossal mistake.

It is a man-made catastroph­e that impacts health of one and all, as half of the air pollution spurt is caused by local dust in the absence of proper roadside landscapin­g and emissions from industry and vehicles. In the coming years, we can prevent such events by ensuring that every city implements the Centre’s dust-management plan, there are restrictio­ns on registrati­on of new fuel-guzzling vehicles, and green dust barriers are developed around cities.

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