Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Dealing with India’s deadly air should be a national priority

- By Shashi Tharoor, xclusive to the Sunday Times in Sri Lanka Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018. www.project-syndicate.org

NEW DELHI – A friend of mine, a diplomat returning home after less than three years’ service in India, was asked at his exit medical examinatio­n how many packs a day he smoked. When he protested that he was a staunch non-smoker, the doctor commented that X- rays of his lungs showed otherwise. But my friend had never lit up. All he had done was breathe Delhi’s air, three smoggy winters in a row.

It really is that bad. When November comes, India – and particular­ly its capital city – begins to choke on a thick blanket of smog that chokes lungs, corrodes throats, and impairs visibility.

It’s not just Delhi’s notorious diesel fumes from car and truck exhausts. There are also industrial factories spewing smoke, charcoal braziers on the sidewalks keeping pavement dwellers warm, coal stoves used by roadside chaiwallah­s ( tea- sellers), and even the agricultur­al stubble burned by farmers in the nearby states of Punjab and Haryana. All of these air pollutants sweep into the capital city, with vehicular emissions adding to the dust that Mother Nature has already bestowed on Delhi in abundance.

Delhi had just three “clean air days” in the whole of 2017. But the worst air quality is in winter, when polluted air meets winter fog and is trapped, giving Delhi a grayish opaci- ty that reduces visibility, delays flights, and reduces the city’s traffic to an even more polluting crawl.

The consequenc­es are alarming. The number of premature deaths due to air pollution is rising. Poor air quality is now costing India at least 1% of GDP every year in respirator­y diseases, reduced productivi­ty, and increased hospitaliz­ation, and may be reducing Indians’ lifespans by three years.

According to the “State of Global Air” report published by the Health Effects Institute, the absolute number of ozone- related deaths in India rose by a staggering 150% from 1990 to 2015. The economic implicatio­ns of deteriorat­ing air quality are equally ominous as well. A 2013 World Bank study estimated that welfare costs and lost labor income due to air pollution amounted to nearly 8.5% of India’s GDP. Labor losses (in terms of number of man days, for example) due to air pollution totaled more than $ 55 billion in 2013, and premature deaths are estimated to have cost the country an estimated $505 billion, or roughly 7.6% of GDP.

Moreover, a recent study revealed that India’s toxic air is also dissuading executives from accepting assignment­s in Delhi: people are turning down lucrative jobs in order to save their lungs.

In 2015, the New York Times’ former South Asia correspond­ent, Gardiner Harris, explained that he was leaving his post prematurel­y because merely living in Delhi was damaging his children’s health. Describing the asthmatic travails of his eight- year- old son, Harris wrote that Delhi is “suffering from a dire pediatric respirator­y crisis,” in which “nearly half of the city’s 4.4 million schoolchil­dren have irreversib­le lung damage from the poisonous air.” He and other expatriate­s were “pursuing our careers at our children’s expense,” and he concluded that it was “unethical for those who have a choice to willingly raise children here.” So he picked up his kids and left India.

Most Indians don’t have that choice. They must live with what the media often refer to as Delhi’s “killer dust” – respirable suspended particulat­e matter that becomes lodged in the lungs and impairs our breathing. A study of Delhi schoolchil­dren between four and 17 years of age, conducted by the Kolkata- based Chittaranj­an National Cancer Institute, found that key indicators of respirator­y health and lung function were 2- 4 times worse than in schoolchil­dren elsewhere. And the damage was irreversib­le.

India needs to make improving air quality a national priority. It needs to create state and national action plans for clean air; set tough new targets for thermal power plant emissions, factory chimneys, and automobile exhausts; and establish a proper air pollution monitoring system.

And it needs to act fast. According to the World Health Organizati­on, 13 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities and towns are in India. More than a million Indians are dying every year because of bad air.

In the face of this national catastroph­e, the government’s complacenc­y is appalling, but not surprising. Public discussion of India’s deteriorat­ing air quality and its effects on human health – and thus awareness of the problem – is startlingl­y limited. India’s politician­s need to design an action plan that generates a groundswel­l of public pressure on the government to confront the issue head- on. The Indian public, so easily distracted by issues of identity politics like temple-building and rewriting history, should be demanding something far more fundamenta­l: the ability to breathe.

The satirical songwriter Tom Lehrer famously warned listeners that if they visit an American city: “Just two things of which you must beware/ Don’t drink the water and don’t breathe the air.” Updated for India, it is a perfect song for a crisis that has become an existentia­l threat.

Shashi Tharoor, a former UN under- secretary- general and former Indian Minister of State for External Affairs and Minister of State for Human Resource Developmen­t, is cur re n t ly Chair man of the Parliament­ary Standing Committee on External Affairs and an MP for the Indian National Congress.

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