Hindustan Times (Noida)

Delhi air in toxic zone, could get worse today

- Soumya Pillai letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Already in the “severe” category, Delhi’s air quality deteriorat­ed further on Friday with the AQI nearly maxing out at several monitoring stations and the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) warning that the pollution levels may rise further and enter the “severe plus” or “emergency” category by Saturday.

The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) recordings showed the overall air quality index (AQI) in the Capital at 460, deteriorat­ing from Thursday’s 429.

The temperatur­es in Delhi rose slightly on Friday but IMD scientists said the respite was brief, adding mercury will fall again from Saturday before it starts to rise again on January 18.

On Friday, the minimum temperatur­e at the Safdarjung observator­y, considered representa­tive of Delhi’s weather, settled at 6.4 degree Celsius, a notch below the season’s normal. The maximum temperatur­e was 20.8 degree Celsius. On Thursday, the minimum temperatur­e was recorded at 2 degree Celsius, five degrees less than what is considered normal for the season.

IMD scientists said the minimum temperatur­e would hover around 4-5 degree Celsius on Saturday and Sunday, and would slightly rise from Monday.

CPCB’S hourly recordings of particulat­e matter levels also showed a rising trend. At 6pm on Friday, the PM 2.5 levels (ultrafine particulat­e matter with diameter less than 2.5 micrometre­s) had remained above the 300ug/m3 mark for over 22 hours. The PM 10 (particulat­e matter with diameter less than 10 micrometre­s) was also inching closer to the 500ug/m3 mark.

The acceptable standards of PM 2.5 levels in India is 60ug/m3 and for PM 10 is 100ug/m3.

IMD scientists said the pollution levels are expected to get worse through Friday night and the air quality is likely to reach “emergency” levels by Saturday.

VK Soni, head of IMD’S environmen­t monitoring and research centre, said that an improvemen­t is likely only from January 18, when the wind direction will change from northweste­rly to easterly.

“The winds are calm and the ventilatio­n conditions are not favourable for the dispersion of pollutants. There is a forecast for pollution levels deteriorat­ing even more through Friday night. The levels will stay in the ‘severe plus’ zone even on Saturday,” said Soni.

At 7pm on Friday, a number of air quality monitoring stations were nearly maxed out. The hourly average AQI in RK

Puram, Mathura Road, Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, Patparganj, Ashok Vihar, Rohini, Narela, Okhla phase-ii and Chandni Chowk had reached above 480. The maximum value on the AQI scale is 500.

Union ministry of earth science’s air quality monitoring centre, System of Air Quality and Weather Forecastin­g and Research (Safar), said the citystate was looking at the “first prolonged extreme air pollution event of 2021”. “Extremely low ventilatio­n and shallow boundary layer height is adding to the severity. Surface winds are calm and the minimum temperatur­e is likely to fall further from Saturday. The AQI is forecasted to deteriorat­e further and rapidly,” the Safar forecast read.

Boundary layer is the lowest part of the atmosphere, which changes according to factors such as temperatur­e. The lower the boundary layer, lesser the space for pollutants to mix with air and disperse. This leads to pollutants being trapped closer to the ground.

Despite the warning from the IMD and Safar, the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) are yet to issue any precaution­ary directions under the Graded Response Action Plan (Grap).

The last order issued by the CAQM had extended the ban on hotmix plants and stone crushers in Delhi till January 2.

CAQM head MM Kutty did not respond to HT’S calls or messages to seek a response.

 ?? AFP ?? A pedestrian crosses a street on a cold and foggy morning in Delhi on Friday.
AFP A pedestrian crosses a street on a cold and foggy morning in Delhi on Friday.

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