The Asian Age

Smoky haze lingers over Delhi-NCR for 3rd day

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The air quality in Delhi remained in the ‘severe’ category, on Thursday morning, with smoky haze lingering over the national capital for the third consecutiv­e day and becoming a serious health concern for the residents.

Doctors have advised people to take lots of precaution­s, including wearing face masks and avoiding early morning and late evening walks, as concentrat­ion of pollutants is at its highest during this period.

Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia said the decision to shut schools will be taken “when the need arises.”

In November 2017, the government had shut the schools for a few days due to deteriorat­ing air quality.

Chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said that the government will start distributi­ng 50 lakh N95 masks among school students from Friday.

Twenty-two of the 37 air quality monitoring stations across Delhi recorded air quality in the ‘severe’ category on Thursday morning. Anand Vihar continued to be the most polluted area with an AQI of 466 followed by Wazirpur with an AQI of 453. An AQI (air quality index) between 050 is considered ‘good,’ 51100 ‘satisfacto­ry,’ 101-200 ‘moderate,’ 201-300 ‘poor,’ 301-400 ‘very poor,’ and 401500 as ‘severe.’ AQI above 500 falls in the ‘severe-plus emergency’ category.

According to the ministry of earth sciences’ air quality monitor, SAFAR, the overall air quality of Delhi continues to be in the severe category. The calm surface wind prevailing for the last two days has led to

strong surface nocturnal inversion and accumulati­on of pollutants.

The stubble-fire count in Haryana and Punjab has increased. SAFAR said that the share of stubble burning in Delhi’s PM2.5 concentrat­ion was 27 per cent on Thursday and is predicted to be 25 per cent on Friday. On Thursday, smoke from crop residue burning accounted for 35 per cent of Delhi’s PM2.5 pollution, the highest this season.

SAFAR said the transport-level wind direction is likely to remain northweste­rly, which is favourable for plume transport, for the next three days. “An increase in surface wind speed is expected on Thursday. AQI is likely to improve slightly on Friday,” it predicted.

A fresh western disturbanc­e as a trough runs roughly along the Afghanista­n-Pakistan border as of Thursday. It will approach Northwest India by November 2.

“It is likely to influence Delhi’s air quality positively. An improvemen­t to

the lower end of the ‘very poor’ category is expected by November 2,” it said.

Weather experts said that Delhi’s problems aggravated due to an unfavourab­le wind speed post Diwali, which led to the accumulati­on of pollutants. They said that there is likely to be some relief on the weekend.

The AAP government has identified five “critically polluted” areas after examining the postDiwali pollution data and asked the municipal corporatio­ns and the Delhi Pollution Control Committee to intensify actions at these locations.

The “critically polluted” areas are Wazirpur, Anand Vihar, Ashok Vihar, Vivek Vihar, and Bawana.

The AQI takes into account five chief pollutants—particulat­e matter with a diameter of less than 10 micrometre­s (PM10), PM2.5, ozone (O3), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and carbon monoxide (CO). The higher the AQI value, the greater the level of air pollution and health concerns.

 ??  ?? Vehicles ply amid an atmosphere shrouded in smog in New Delhi on Thursday. AAP activists (left) protest against Punjab and Haryana government­s for their failure to stop stubble-burning.
—BIPLAB BANERJEE, PTI
Vehicles ply amid an atmosphere shrouded in smog in New Delhi on Thursday. AAP activists (left) protest against Punjab and Haryana government­s for their failure to stop stubble-burning. —BIPLAB BANERJEE, PTI

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