Millennium Post

Curb road dust urgently: EPCA to Delhi, NCR states

EPCA has tasked authoritie­s in region to prepare a list of roads contributi­ng to dust pollution–around three each in Delhi, Noida, and Gurgaon for time being

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: A number of major roads in Delhi-ncr, which are in a state of disrepair and contribute to dust pollution, have come under the scanner of the Supreme Courtmanda­ted EPCA.

The EPCA or the Environmen­t Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority, has tasked the authoritie­s in the region to prepare a list of such roads-around three each in Delhi, Noida, and Gurgaon for the time being.

It assumes significan­ce as an IIT Kanpur study on Delhi's air pollution, considered the most comprehens­ive report on the issue till date, had identified road dust as the biggest source of suspended particulat­e matter in the city.

EPCA chairman Bhure Lal said after the identifica­tion of the "high-impact" roads, including NH-24, urgent dust control measures would be taken up as part of the larger action plan to contain pollution levels, which has spiralled after Diwali.

Although the scale of the initiative appears small when compared to the magnitude of the problem, more roads are under the EPCA'S lens and they will also be brought under the ambit of the action plan later, the EPCA said.

Officials of Delhi's environmen­t department and the pollution control boards of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh were directed to take the requisite steps towards the identifica­tion of the roads by coordinati­ng with the agen- cies concerned, including the PWD and the NHAI.

According to the IIT report, road dust makes up over 50 per cent of the total PM10 particles and about 38 per cent of PM2.5 particles. PM2.5 and PM10 are the most dominant pollutants in Delhi's air. These ultrafine particulat­es, which can mea- sure up to 30 times tinier than the width of a human hair and reach the bloodstrea­m of a person through the respirator­y system, pose serious health risks.

The IIT report had observed that the silt load on some Delhi roads is very high. Silt becomes airborne with the movement of vehicles, it said, estimating that PM10 emission from road dust was over 65 tonnes per day in Delhi.

"The potential control options can be sweeping and watering of roads, better constructi­on and maintenanc­e, growing plants, grass etc to prevent re-suspension of dust," it said.

The Delhi government had announced grand plans for mechanical­ly sweeping, greening and landscapin­g of the major arterial roads last year, but the project has not quite taken off and dusty bald patches on the central and side verges of roads remain a common sight.

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