The Borneo Post

Delhi braces for pollution with emergency plan

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NEW DELHI: Delhi’s biggest coal power plant was shutting down yesterday as a new emergency plan to improve air quality in one of the world’s most polluted cities came into force, Indian officials said.

Under the new strategy, restrictio­ns on constructi­on sites and traffic will be imposed depending on the air quality in the megacity of some 20 million people.

When the air is classed as ‘poor’, as it was yesterday, authoritie­s will ban the burning of garbage in landfills as well as fire crackers and certain constructi­on activities. When the air is ‘ very poor’ diesel generators will be halted, parking fees hiked and more public transport provided. ‘Severe’ measures include closing brick kilns.

Our aim is to stop the air quality from deteriorat­ing further though certain factors are out of our control such as crop burning, wind speed and lack of public transporta­tion. Bhure Lal, environmen­t authority official

When it reaches ‘severe+’, a new category, authoritie­s will stop the entry of trucks except those with essential goods and regulate the number of cars on the road.

The Badarpur thermal plant was permanentl­y close yesterday because of its high contributi­on to pollution in the city. Smog spikes during winter in Delhi, when air quality often eclipses the World Health Organisati­on’s safe levels. Cooler air traps pollutants – such as from vehicles, building sites and farmers burning crops in regions outside the Indian capital – close to the ground.

Authoritie­s in the sprawling city attempted to implement similar measures last winter but to little avail. This is partly because authoritie­s are powerless to prevent some sources of pollution.

“Our aim is to stop the air quality from deteriorat­ing further though certain factors are out of our control such as crop burning, wind speed and lack of public transporta­tion,” environmen­t authority official Bhure Lal told AFP. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Residentia­l buildings are visible behind the stubble burning smoke at a rice field in Zirakpur in the northern state of Punjab, India. — Reuters photo
Residentia­l buildings are visible behind the stubble burning smoke at a rice field in Zirakpur in the northern state of Punjab, India. — Reuters photo

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