The Asian Age

‘ Premature deaths linked to worsening air quality’

Polluting air choking lungs of city residents, claims IIT study

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

High number of premature deaths are being recorded in the country, owing to worsening air quality in the last two decades, said a study conducted by IIT- Delhi.

The study titled “Know What You Breathe”, said that the level of Particulat­e Matter ( PM) 2.5 is more than two times of its National Annual Standard and eight times of the WHO’s annual permissibl­e limits in all the studied cities with the exception of Ranchi, capital of Jharkhand.

The study was conducted with the support of the Centre for Environmen­t and Energy Developmen­t ( CEED) and has found that the annual mortality is in the range of 150- 300 persons per year for every one lakh population in the urban areas of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Jharkhand.

The researcher­s studied the annual mean PM 2.5 concentrat­ion for 11 north Indian cities using the satellite data of the last 17 years.

Out of these 11 cities, eight are also listed in the global air quality assessment report of the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) titled ‘ Global Ambient Air Quality Database ( 2018)’.

“We are witnessing a public health emergency in our cities as polluting air is choking our lungs. State and Union government­s need to take note of this alarming situation and create national clean air action plan which is ambitious, effective and focuses on time- bound implementa­tion ,” Abhishek Pratap, Programme Director of the CEED said.

The study found that level of PM 2.5 exposure was moving downward from west to east of the Indo- Gangetic plain with the highest proliferat­ion in Varanasi, while the slowest was in Ranchi. The report has indicated an increase of 28.5 microgramm­e per cubic metre in PM 2.5 in the last 17 years in Varanasi.

Along with Varanasi, the rate of increase of PM 2.5 is ‘ alarming’ in cities like Meerut, Agra, Lucknow, Gorakhpur and Patna while its ‘ Moderate’ in Kanpur, Allahabad and Gaya. In Muzaffarpu­r, the rate of PM 2.5 increase is somewhat comparable to Ranchi.

The post- monsoon ( October- November) and winter ( DecemberFe­bruary) seasons have high pollution exposure due to calm weather and lower atmospheri­c boundary layer, said the study.

 ?? — BIPLAB BANERJEE ?? AICC in- charge P. C. Chacko speaks as DPCC president Ajay Maken and other leaders look on during a meeting with AICC secretarie­s and former DPCC presidents at Rajiv Bhawan in New Delhi on Tuesday.
— BIPLAB BANERJEE AICC in- charge P. C. Chacko speaks as DPCC president Ajay Maken and other leaders look on during a meeting with AICC secretarie­s and former DPCC presidents at Rajiv Bhawan in New Delhi on Tuesday.

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