Millennium Post

Badarpur power station can start operation: EPCA

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NEW DELHI: Starting on Thursday, the Badarpur power plant that has been shut for over four months can start temporary operation, ban on diesel generators will be lifted, and hundreds of brick kilns can resume production due to “some visible improvemen­t” in air quality in Delhi, the Supreme Court-appointed EPCA on Wednesday said.

On October 17 last year, the Environmen­t Pollution Control Authority (EPCA) had imposed the measures under the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) to combat pollution in the city ahead of the winter.

The EPCA on Wednesday said its action plan category has been changed. “The GRAP category of ‘very poor' and ‘severe' will be lifted, starting March 1. So, the restrictio­ns imposed in the city last October will also be lifted. However, the category now would be ‘moderate to poor' until we (EPCA) further upgrade it,” EPCA member Sunita Narain said.

Narain, also the director general of the Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE), said, at a press conference here, “There is a some visible improvemen­t in air quality, but it it still a long way to go to achieve a clean air. It is not safe to breathe yet.”

Since October 17, the Badarpur power plant has been shut, use of diesel generators banned, and hundreds of brick kilns ordered to stop production in Delhi under the GRAP. Only those brick kilns, which have implemente­d the zigzag technology that helps reduce black carbon emission, were allowed to function.

Narain and EPCA chairman Bhure Lal, who too addressed the reporters, released a ‘Report card on Delhi's air pollution' and enunciated the measures to be taken by the EPCA from March onwards.

The Badarpur plant in south Delhi would be “permanentl­y closed” from July this year, the EPCA said.

“About 1,400 brick kiln owners have submitted affidavits to EPCA undertakin­g commitment to shift to improved-zigzag kiln technology by April 2018. Roughly, 600 have converted. By July 1, 2018, only zigzag technology­compliant kilns will be allowed to operate ,” Narain said.

Asked if the recent ‘Clean Air Campaign', jointly organised by the Environmen­t ministry and the Delhi government, had any impact on the air quality, Narain said, “Let's no talk about taking credit. It is a result of combined action by all people.”

The Air Quality Index in Delhi stood at 259 (‘poor') this evening. Under the GRAP, measures under ‘very poor' and ‘severe' categories are rolled out when levels of PM2.5 are between 121-250 microgramm­es per cubic metre ( g/m3) and above 250 g/m3 respective­ly. PM10 levels have to be between 351-430 g/m3 and above 430 g/m3 respective­ly.

 ??  ?? The plant had been shut down four months ago
The plant had been shut down four months ago

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