The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indian capital’s smog set to worsen

-

The situation is going to be grim.You cannot have something monitored solely by the Supreme Court whose ruling last year can be seen only as a stop-gap arrangemen­t.

Ritwick Dutta, environmen­t lawyer

NEW DELHI: With a toxic smog beginning to envelop New Delhi as winter approaches, residents of the Indian capital are set to make matters a lot worse by burning hundreds of thousands of firecracke­rs to celebrate the Hindu festival of Diwali early next month.

India, which has the world’s 14 most polluted cities, has made little effort this year to curb the sale of ear-splitting, firecracke­rs that explode through Diwali night.

The smoke from them shrouds New Delhi and its satellite cities in a haze that can linger for days as wind speeds drop in the cooler weather, adding to pollution caused by the burning of crop residue, vehicle emissions and industrial gases.

Authoritie­s, reluctant to step in to curb the rampant use of firecracke­rs on Diwali, one of the most important festivals for millions of Hindus across the country, are passing the buck to the Supreme Court to restrict the sale and use of fireworks.

“It’s not always easy for the government to step into sensitive issues like banning fireworks on Diwali but it works for us and others if the court decides to step in on this,” said a senior official in the Hindu nationalis­t government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who declined to be identified in line with government policy.

A spokesman for the federal environmen­t ministry declined comment. A spokesman for the Delhi city government was not available for comment.

Last year, the Supreme Court temporaril­y banned the sale of firecracke­rs in and around the capital city, an area with a population of about 20 million. That reduced the use of fireworks – cutting resulting emissions by about 30 per cent – government officials said.

This year, the court, which has heard submission­s from the city government, the environmen­t ministry and the firecracke­r industry, has so far refrained from giving an order to ban the sale of firecracke­rs

The court hasn’t indicated whether it will make a ruling before Diwali, that falls this year on Nov 7.

“The situation is going to be grim,” Ritwick Dutta, an environmen­t lawyer associated with the not-for-profit Legal Initiative for Forest and Environmen­t, told Reuters.

“You cannot have something monitored solely by the Supreme Court whose ruling last year can be seen only as a stop-gap arrangemen­t.”

While Diwali is celebrated throughout the country, New Delhi accounts for nearly half of India’s demand for firecracke­rs. Last year, the smog a few weeks after Diwali was so bad that Delhi resorted to emergency measures such as shutting schools and banning constructi­on.

Despite rising pollution levels, the Delhi government and the federal environmen­t ministry have shied away from asking the Supreme Court for a complete ban on the sale of firecracke­rs, according to the petitions reviewed by Reuters.

In its affidavit to the Supreme Court, the environmen­t ministry has rather asked for the introducti­on of firecracke­rs that emit less harmful chemicals.

With the use of the new firecracke­rs, toxic emissions would go down by 30-40 per cent, said Rakesh Kumar, director of the state-run National Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Research Institute.

“But the firecracke­r industry needs to come forward to take the samples of the prototype and the new chemical formulatio­ns that we’ve developed,” Kumar said in an interview.

Large-scale production of such fireworks would take time and require heavy investment, K Mariappan, general secretary of the Tamil Nadu Fireworks and Amorces Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n, told Reuters by telephone from Sivakasi in southern India.

Sivakasi accounts for nearly 90 per cent of India’s total firecracke­r output which is worth 60 billion rupees (US$816 million) a year. After last year’s Delhi ban, production fell by nearly 40 per cent, resulting in lower revenues and job losses at nearly 80 firecracke­r plants that dot the town and employ about 300,000 people.

Shopkeeper­s in the trade say setting off firecracke­rs on Diwali is part of an ancient Hindu tradition and the Supreme Court must respect the sentiments of Hindus.

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Indian Bengali Hindu priest perform ‘Arti’ ritual in front of an idol of the goddess Durga in New Delhi. The festival of Dussehra will be held on the last day of the Navratri (nine nights) Festival, symbolisin­g the triumph of good over evil, culminatin­g when firecracke­r-stuffed effigies of the demon king are set alight.
— AFP photo Indian Bengali Hindu priest perform ‘Arti’ ritual in front of an idol of the goddess Durga in New Delhi. The festival of Dussehra will be held on the last day of the Navratri (nine nights) Festival, symbolisin­g the triumph of good over evil, culminatin­g when firecracke­r-stuffed effigies of the demon king are set alight.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia