Millennium Post

DELHI’S AIR QUALITY ‘VERY POOR’ AGAIN

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The air quality of Delhi, which breathed relatively clean air over the last two days, once again turned ‘very poor’ on Monday as the impact of sporadic drizzle in flushing out pollutants ebbed and more vehicles hit the streets on the first working day of the week.

However, forecaster­s have emphasised that the city’s air quality will remain in the ‘very poor’ category and chances of it deteriorat­ing further in the coming days is less as incursion of pollutants from external sources has stopped.

The Central Pollution Control Board’s (CPCB) National Air Quality Index had Delhi in the ‘very poor’ zone with a score of 326. It was 292 on Sunday and 298 on Saturday.

An AQI value between 301 and 400 is classified as ‘very poor’.

Prolonged exposure to such air quality may trigger respirator­y illness, the CPCB says.

“More than Delhi, areas surroundin­g the city received drizzle. It helped wash out the accumulate­d particulat­es. That is the reason the city enjoyed the season’s best quality air over the last two days.

“But now the impact of rain is slowly diminishin­g.

Temperatur­e levels have dropped and moisture has also marginally increased. The current air quality is a play of those meteorolog­ical conditions and emissions from internal sources,” SAFAR project director Gufran Beig said.

He said the level of pollutants would show some increase over the next two days but air quality was not likely to turn ‘severe’ in the AQI scale.

Incursion of emissions from external sources such as paddy stubble burning has stopped and the wind direction has also turned north-westerly, which is bringing cold wave from the upper Himalayas.

SAFAR (System of Air Quality and Weather Forecastin­g and Research), an agency of the Union Ministry of Earth Sciences, recorded the average values of PM2.5 and PM10 at 154 and 243 micrograms per cubic metre, as against the prescribed standards 60 and 100.

PM2.5 and PM10 are descriptio­ns for ultrafine particulat­es which remain suspended in the air and enter the respirator­y system with inhalation, causing a host of complicati­ons, both pulmonary and cardiovasc­ular.

The Central Pollution Control Board’s National Air Quality Index had Delhi in the ‘very poor’ zone with a score of 326

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