The Borneo Post

Delhi chokes on toxic haze despite Diwali fireworks ban

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NEW DELHI: New Delhi was shrouded in a thick toxic haze yesterday after a night of frenzied Diwali fireworks sent the air quality plummeting despite a ban on sale of fireworks aimed at thwarting a repeat of an ‘airpocalyp­se’.

India’s Supreme Court had banned the sale of firecracke­rs ahead of the Hindu festival of lights to prevent a repeat of last year’s post-Diwali air pollution crises that left Delhi’s 20 million residents gasping for weeks.

But late Thursday the readings for the pollutants hovered around 1,100 microgram per cubic metre in some parts of the city — 11 times above the prescribed air quality levels of World Health Organisati­on ( WHO).

Air quality data from Delhi

The wind system will not allow stagnation of smoke over the city. We will have better air this time.

Pollution Control Committee showed pollution levels in a crowded neighbourh­ood hit 1,179 around midnight as firework displays reached a crescendo.

Residents of Delhi, rated the most polluted city by WHO in 2014, showed little considerat­ion for the ban, purchasing crackers illegally or using those bought earlier.

The levels had subsided through the night but were still ‘hazardous’ in several districts across the capital yesterday morning.

Levels of PM2.5 — the fine particles linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease — have soared since the beginning of October when millions of farmers in the city’s north burn post-harvest crop residue.

The city’s quality steadily worsens at the onset of winter, a consequenc­e of rapid urbanisati­on that brings pollution from diesel engines, coal- fired power plants, industrial emissions and atmospheri­c dust.

The court on Oct 9 had banned sale of firecracke­rs across the city in anticipati­on of last year’s catastroph­ic levels of pollution. But it did not put any restrictio­ns on bursting of fireworks.

Last year’s Diwali festivitie­s spiked pollution levels to a record high — the worst in nearly two decades — forcing the government to shut schools and close down a coal-fired power plant.

On Tuesday an environmen­tal watchdog ordered the shutting down of all diesel generators and the city’s lone coal- fired power plant as part of a slew of measure to curb pollution.

Experts however say the air quality will remain considerab­ly cleaner this year, thanks to a favourable wind system.

“The wind system will not allow stagnation of smoke over the city. We will have better air this time,” said Gufran Beig, chief scientist at India’s state-run System of Air Quality Weather Forecastin­g and Research. — AFP

Gufran Beig, India’s state-run System of Air Quality Weather Forecastin­g and Researchch­ief scientist

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