Millennium Post

Delhi may halt pvt cars next week if smog thickens: EPCA

- SAYANTAN GHOSH

NEW DELHI: The use of private vehicles may be stopped in Delhi if air pollution, which has reached severe levels in recent days, gets worse, a senior environmen­tal official said on Tuesday.

Toxic smog has started to envelop vast swathes of northern part of the country, including New Delhi, as it does each year when winter approaches and farmers burn off the residue of crops.

“Let us hope the air pollution situation in Delhi doesn’t deteriorat­e, but if it turns out to be an emergency, we will have to stop the use of private transport,” said Bhure Lal, chairman of the Environmen­t Pollution Control Authority (EPCA). “There is a committee which will advise me on this.”

EPCA, appointed by the Supreme Court, has already proposed halting constructi­on, the use of diesel-run power generators, brick kilns and the burning of garbage between Nov. 1 and Nov. 10 when pollution levels are expected to rise.

The overall Air Quality Index (AQI) at 3 pm was 401, falling in the ‘severe’ category, the highest this season, Central Pollution Control Board officials said.

An AQI between 0 and 50 is considered ‘good’, 51 and 100 ‘satisfacto­ry’, 101 and 200 ‘moderate’, 201 and 300 ‘poor’, 301 and 400 ‘very poor’, and 401 and 500 ‘severe’.

The Centre-run System of Air Quality Forecastin­g And Research (SAFAR) attributed the spike to “heavy stubble burning in the last 24 hours and calm winds”.

About 28 per cent of pollution by PM2.5 (presence of particles in the air with a diameter of less than 2.5 micrometre­s) on Tuesday was caused due to regional factors like stubble burning, SAFAR officials said.

Meanwhile, according to a WHO report, over one lakh children under five years of age died in India in 2016 due to exposure to toxic air.

NEW DELHI: The Delhi Cabinet has approved a proposal to revise the pay-scales of teachers and administra­tive posts in universiti­es and colleges in line with the recommenda­tions of the seventh Central Pay Commission (CPC), said an official.

"The Delhi government, with a view to provide quality education in its institutio­ns, has been taking appropriat­e measures from time to time to ensure that the faculty has the talent and commitment to effectivel­y contribute towards achieving the desired objectives," an official statement said.

The Cabinet also gave approval for allowing the Quality Council of India to be engaged as system integrator by the Delhi Commission for Protection of Child Rights to assist in the project management of comprehens­ive school evaluation exercise of all schools –government, municipal, aided and unaided –in Delhi, on nomination basis.

 ?? Pic/ Naveen Sharma ??
Pic/ Naveen Sharma

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