Millennium Post

Severe pollution back in Capital

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Even though the pollution levels in six major cities plummeted during the initial phase of the lockdown, it is on the rise again as the country gradually opens up, a recent study has revealed.

According to the Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE), PM 2.5 levels across Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Hyderabad and Bengaluru dropped by a phenomenal 45-88 per cent during the pandemic-induced lockdown period.

The analysis, however, found that the “pollution registered a comeback” as the nation opened up pursuant to lockdown 4.0.

“In the six cities, there was a two-six times increase in PM 2.5 levels during lockdown 4.0,” said the report.

According to the findings, the national capital saw the steepest rise of four to eight times, as compared to two to six times in other cities.

The initial decrease in pollution could be attributed to no industrial activity, reduced on-road traffic and temporary halt on constructi­on activities.

Sunita Narain, Director General of Centre for Science and Environmen­t said that the analysis showed the nation needed an interventi­on at such a massive scale to make skies blue and our air and lungs clean.

“It tells us that there should be no question, therefore, on the key sources of air pollution in our country: emissions from vehicles and industry,” she added.

CSE also presented a charter of environmen­tal demands to ensure a better, cleaner and more sustainabl­e environmen­t,

life and air quality.

It stated that reducing pol

lution from heavy-duty vehicles, switching to clean vehicles, using clean power and providing green economic stimulus were a few strategies which could help retain the healthy air.

Centre’s executive director Anumita Roychowdhu­ry said the nation must ensure that pollution levels do not go back to ‘normal’ - what they were before the lockdown.

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