India Today

DEATH BY BREATH

DELHI REELS UNDER THICK SMOG— AGAIN. AND THERE’S STILL NO COMBAT STRATEGY BEYOND AN EMERGENCY PLAN TO DEAL WITH EXTREME DURESS

- By Shougat Dasgupta

WE’VE BEEN HERE BEFORE. Exactly this time last year, in fact. Not to mention every year for nigh on a decade, with any improvemen­t in air quality brought about by a Supreme Courtorder­ed move towards the use of Compressed Natural Gas ( CNG) in public transport vehicles in 2001 wiped out just six years later. What we’ve seen instead is air so thick and noxious— a cinereous haze through which barely anything can be seen— that on November 7 the Indian Medical Associatio­n declared it a “public health emergency” and recommende­d that people submit themselves to a voluntary period of house arrest. “Welcome to the Apocalypse”, as this reporter overheard one young mother say to another as they dropped their children off at school in central Delhi, air masks clamped firmly to everyone’s faces. A day or so

later, the schools were closed.

Still, casting about for some cheer, Anumita Roychowdhu­ry, an executive director at the Centre for Science and Environmen­t ( CSE) in Delhi, argues that this year is different, a watershed of sorts. “For the first time,” she says, sitting at a small round table in a hall in the organisati­on’s Lodhi Road office, “this region, this country actually, has an organised emergency plan to deal with this kind of situation.” Cold comfort, residents of Delhi might think, as they look out at the baleful smog. But, insists Roychowdhu­ry, without the Graded Response Action Plan ( GRAP) demanded by the Supreme Court in December 2016, matters might have been worse. She says that since the air quality got so bad that a state of emergency was declared— requiring, according to GRAP, stopping the entry of trucks into Delhi and the temporary cessation of all constructi­on work, in addition to the measures taken when the air quality is merely ‘ severe’ and ‘ very poor’— the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y, Pune, has assessed the response and attributed “15 to 20 per cent” of “what minimal improvemen­t there has been” to GRAP. Perhaps. But as small beer goes, this is of the pygmy variety.

If GRAP has had an effect, and the very existence of a planned response is cause for celebratio­n, what has been predictabl­y ineffectiv­e, even infuriatin­g, has been the response of politician­s at both state and central level. There are three state government­s that need to work together to improve air quality in the National Capital Region ( NCR): Delhi, led by AAP; Punjab, led by the Congress; and Haryana, led by the BJP. And then there’s the Centre.

Around noon on November 7, Arvind Kejriwal, the chief minister of Delhi, as if he were, like the rest of us, perplexed by the incompeten­ce of the authoritie­s, tweeted: “Delhi has become a gas chamber. Every year this happens... We have to find a soln to crop burning in adjoining states.” This is a deft bit of buck- passing. Kejriwal has been quick to point out that AAP sent letters in August to government department­s in Haryana, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh warning of the onset of winter and the crop burning that so exacerbate­s the NCR’s already foul air. This is a bit like watching a rock sail through the air and millisecon­ds before it hits a child in the head, shouting “watch out”, and then crowing “told you”, as the parents and concerned passersby gather around the prone, stricken child. What Kejriwal hasn’t said, and what has been revealed after an RTI applicatio­n, is that his government has had Rs 787

crore to spend, collected from the environmen­t cess, and spent only Rs 93 lakh in over two years in power.

The truth is that AAP, like the neighbouri­ng government­s and the Centre it is so eager to blame, has done very little since emergency conditions last year to mitigate the effects this year. Not that you’d get anyone at the party to admit it. Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia tells an affecting story about seeing two children projectile vomit out of the window of their school bus, and how it prompted him to close the city’s schools, without feeling the need to take any personal responsibi­lity for letting things come to such a pass. Atishi Marlena, a member of AAP’s political affairs committee and advisor to Sisodia, has frequently drawn attention to smog being a North Indian problem without, again, acknowledg­ing that the Delhi government is a part of that problem. And party leader and spokespers­on Ashutosh, when contacted on the phone, runs through a litany of complaints about other state government­s while deflecting AAP inaction— from failing to add buses to Delhi’s inadequate ‘ fleet’ to not vacuum- cleaning the dust off the streets as prom- ised— onto bureaucrat­ic hurdles and a lack of cooperatio­n from other agencies, like the Delhi Developmen­t Authority. “Delhi’s unique administra­tive situation” is a favourite AAP phrase, intended to signify “don't blame us, we want to govern but we’re not allowed to”. Over time, this wearies, sounds to voters like excuse- making.

But at least AAP appears to acknowledg­e the scale and seriousnes­s of the issue. The chief ministers of Punjab and Haryana have spent more time hurling childish insults at Kejriwal than addressing either crop burning or pollution in their states. While cities in Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan are even more polluted than Delhi, yet there appears little pressure on them to enact reforms. According to a World Health Organizati­on ranking, based on figures collated between 2008 and 2015, 10 Indian cities are among the world’s 20 most polluted. Despite people living in cities across northern India breathing the worst air in the world, the equivalent some say of smoking dozens of cigarettes a day, the Centre appears to believe pollution is an issue for state government­s alone.

Ashutosh is right when he says that the Centre must

take it upon itself to mediate a discussion between states on a long- term, year- round plan to tackle pollution. On crop burning, the Centre claims that the Punjab government has failed to spend Rs 97 crore allocated to it between 2016 and 2018 to help subsidise alternativ­es. But this is a drop in the bucket. AAP, Ashutosh says, is “demanding that the Centre release Rs 3,000 crore to subsidise machines for farmers in Punjab. There is an agrarian crisis and the state has been left bankrupt by the Badals ( who control the Shiromani Akali Dal, the party that has governed Punjab for the last decade before being voted out in March).” It’s why Ashutosh sees no contradict­ion in AAP complainin­g about stubble burning in Delhi while in Punjab its leader of the opposition Sukhpal Singh Khaira joins farmers in setting a field alight. “It’s not about farmers,” Ashutosh says, “it’s about the system and state apparatus.” And so, despite threats of arrest for burning stubble, farmers, already burdened by debt, have continued the practice because they cannot afford the Rs 5,000 per acre they say it costs to dispose of excess straw in environmen­tally sustainabl­e ways. Punjab asked the Centre for Rs 1,109 crore to offset 40 per cent of the cost to farmers, but the money has not been forthcomin­g.

Harsh Vardhan, the Union environmen­t minister, ironically at a climate change conference in Germany when the worst of the smog descended on Delhi, continues to tell journalist­s that pollution, while admittedly an issue, cannot be said to be a killer. There is no need to panic, he says, because what is happening in Delhi with pollution is not on par with what happened in Bhopal in 1984. The rhetorical gymnastics and absurd logic employed by the environmen­t minister contradict his own position on pollution—“a

silent killer”— before he became minister. A widely quoted study recently published in the Lancet, perhaps the most reputable journal of its kind worldwide, estimated that polluted air and water caused the deaths of 2.5 million Indians in 2015 alone. Even the ministry of health and family welfare estimates that about 6 per cent of diseases in India in 2016 were caused by outdoor pollution. How then can pollution be a matter for states and not the Centre?

Sunita Narain, the director general of CSE and a member of the Environmen­t Pollution ( Prevention and Control) Authority, or EPCA, asserts that “nobody is serious about pollution”. Judging by the disinteres­t of the central government, the puerility of Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar’s spat with Kejriwal, and Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh’s hauteur, it’s an observatio­n that’s hard to counter. As Narain’s colleague Roychowdhu­ry makes it clear, there is little political will to take the necessary decisions to combat air pollution. The surfeit of media- fuelled outrage at this time of the year gives the impression that it is only at the onset of winter that pollution becomes a problem. The air quality in Delhi is unsafe throughout the year. Stubble burning only accentuate­s, makes many times worse, an ongoing travesty. Recent studies have pinned the blame on differing causes, but taken together offer a composite of reasons why Delhi is, according to the WHO, the world’s 11th most polluted city by particulat­e matter concentrat­ion. These airborne particles are most dangerous, especially PM2.5, penetratin­g deep into the lungs, with children particular­ly vulnerable.

Mukesh Sharma, a professor at IIT Kanpur, co- authored a study in January last year and pins the blame mostly on road dust and vehicular emissions. More than half of Delhi’s air pollution, he contends, is the fault of vehicles crisscross­ing the city’s dusty and sometimes unpaved roads. His conclusion echoes a study by the air monitoring agency SAFAR that examined Delhi’s air pollution during the 2010 Commonweal­th Games, and found road dust to be the largest factor. The Delhi gov- ernment’s odd- even plan, which takes half the cars off the road, gestures at the problem while being largely ineffectiv­e because of the weakness of the city’s public transport infrastruc­ture and AAP’s willingnes­s to grant exemptions to two- wheelers, responsibl­e for so much of the vehicular pollution.

Governance is the underlying issue. Roychowdhu­ry says that the answers to pollution in the NCR are apparent. What is lacking is political urgency, a willingnes­s to take difficult decisions. In part, there is an implied criticism too of the city’s richer inhabitant­s, people who complain loudly about farmers burning crop residue but would rather buy expensive air masks and air filters than fork out higher parking charges, tolls and congestion fees. In Beijing, you can only buy a new car if you do not already have a vehicle registered in your name. Imagine enforcing that in Delhi. There is evidence that emergency response works, somewhat. Now, as wind and potentiall­y light rain relieve the worst of the smog, the challenge is to commit to a yearround strategy to improve air quality.

Last year, China put in place a five- year plan to reduce PM2.5 levels by 25 per cent. To meet that goal, they’re making necessary investment­s in wind and solar energy and setting stringent emission standards. Delhi, Roychowdhu­ry says, needs to reduce PM2.5 levels by 74 per cent. Local governance— despite AAP’s penchant for shrugging its shoulders and feigning frustrated helplessne­ss— is vital. If AAP wants to persuade people to give up their cars, even for just a few days a week, it needs to provide alternativ­es; if that means badgering the DDA every day for land to build bus depot, well then, surely, that is AAP’s job. Even then, to improve air quality in the capital, a new study argues, will require the cooperatio­n of neighbouri­ng state government­s. And, of course, a Centre that believes a solution to pollution is its business.

Narain calls for our politician­s to “grow up”. A difficult propositio­n when the evidence suggests they would rather snipe at each other on social media than get together in a room and have a conversati­on. ( Kejwiwal and Khattar would finally meet on the 15th.) A pox on all your houses, a denizen of Delhi might wish to declare. Except, the pox is already on our house.

“THE APEX COURT IS SEIZED OF THE MATTER. LEAVE IT TO THEM AND THE CENTRE TO FIND LONG- TERM SOLUTIONS.” Amarinder Singh Chief Minister, Punjab

“SOME 40,000 FARMERS CULTIVATE IN DELHI. WHAT STEPS HAVE BEEN TAKEN TO KEEP THEM FROM BURNING STUBBLE?” Manohar Lal Khattar Chief Minister, Haryana

“DELHI HAS BECOME A GAS CHAMBER. WE HAVE TO FIND A SOLUTION TO CROP BURNING IN ADJOINING STATES.” Arvind Kejriwal Chief Minister, Delhi

 ?? PARVEEN NEGI ?? FARM FATAL Stubble burning in a paddy field in Patiala
PARVEEN NEGI FARM FATAL Stubble burning in a paddy field in Patiala
 ??  ??
 ?? PARVEEN NEGI ??
PARVEEN NEGI
 ??  ?? SMOG SCREEN
This was Nov. 8— not just another day for schoolchil­dren in Delhi
SMOG SCREEN This was Nov. 8— not just another day for schoolchil­dren in Delhi
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India