The Borneo Post

Faced with Delhi’s pollution, India’s federal agencies bought 140 air purifiers

-

NEW DELHI: As pollution choked India’s capital Delhi in recent years, a total of 140 air purifiers were purchased for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s offices and at least six other government agencies, according to previously unpublishe­d government data.

The purchases came as Modi faced criticism for not taking effective steps to improve air quality in Delhi, one of the world’s most polluted cities.

Delhi’s chief minister, who belongs to an opposition party, called the city a ‘gas chamber’ last year as levels of airborne PM 2.5, tiny particulat­e matter that can reach deep into the lungs, far exceeded levels classified as ‘hazardous’.

A British medical journal, The Lancet, has estimated air pollution was responsibl­e for almost 10 per cent of the total disease burden in India in 2016.

Each year, when pollution levels shoot up in the winter months, the capital’s schools are often forced to shut. Last year, all schools in the city were closed for five days.

A federal body that manages more than 45 government schools in the capital said it had made no purchases of air purifiers and had no plans to do so.

“Offices are generally air conditione­d, so air purifiers will function. Our schools aren’t air conditione­d, windows are open, so air purifiers won’t make a difference,” said Santosh Kumar Mall, commission­er of the body, Kendriya Vidyalaya Sangathan.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) has recommende­d keeping windows closed when air pollution is high. It also says air conditione­rs should not be used if they draw air from the outside.

Asked if any steps were taken to safeguard school students from Delhi’s dirty air, Mall told Reuters: “I don’t think so, when pollution increased a lot, our schools were shut”.

The federal government, however, spent 3.6 million rupees, or about US$ 55,000, to buy air purifiers for Modi’s offices and at least six federal department­s between 2014 and 2017, according to government data reviewed by Reuters. Besides Modi’s offices inside parliament house, the agencies included federal economic planning think tank NITI Aayog and the ministries of health, agricultur­e, tourism, home affairs and foreign affairs.

“This initiative is like giving gumboots to city officials when the drainage system collapses and the city is covered in muck,” said Oommen C Kurian, a health researcher at the New Delhi-based think tank Observer Research Foundation. “This is just not the response we are looking for.”

A government spokesman directed questions on the subject to the federal environmen­t ministry, which did not respond to a request for comment.

Modi’s office and the six department­s for which data was available did not respond to Reuters’ queries. Air purifiers are devices which use fi lters to reduce indoor air pollutants. Such machines are beyond the means of most people in India, where the annual per capita income was US$1,709 in 2016, according to the World Bank.

Still, air purifier sales have been surging in Delhi, a city of more than 20 million people. The sale of such units at Amazon.com Inc’s India website grew by more than 3.5 times in 2017 over the previous year, the company said. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia