Authorities callous to sinking air quality
Millions in smaller cities like Moradabad barely aware of harmful effects of air they breathe
In the northern Indian city of Moradabad fumes from burning electronic waste blend with seasonal smog to create an even deadlier mix of pollutants than in Delhi, where filthy air has caused public outcry and made global headlines.
India’s smog crisis has centred on the capital but pollution is as bad or worse beyond its borders, with millions in smaller cities like Moradabad barely aware of the harmful effects of the air they breathe.
For more than a week toxic smog has hovered over densely populated regions of northern India and Pakistan, sending pollution levels soaring to many times the World Health Organisation safe limit.
Delhi, the world’s most polluted capital city, became the epicentre of the crisis as doctors declared a public health emergency and sent millions of students home from school.
But in Moradabad, like many cities across northern India, air pollution was also off the charts.
Yet few appeared fazed at their city’s degraded environment despite the metallic taste hanging in the air.
“There is no pollution,” declared resident Shetty Bhai, as dozens of furnaces in the background billowed reeking smoke from smouldering e-waste into the air.
Combined measure
“We face no issues and work, play and run normally. We don’t suffer from any disease,” he told AFP.
The city’s nearly one million inhabitants face a toxic brew beyond what instruments can measure. The air quality index, a combined measure of poisonous gases and fine airborne particles, hit 500 — the absolute maximum beyond, which no further readings can be obtained.
The dial remained there for almost a week.
The smog mingles with tiny particles released by burning e-waste that the WHO says can cause “irreversible damage” to children’s immune and nervous systems in high doses.
There was little evidence of masks or other precautions being taken even as smog hung stuck so thick it burnt the eyes and blurred visibility.
On a rooftop, pollution researcher Aprajita Singh inspected an air quality monitor and filters she had changed just hours earlier. The white discs had turned completely black.
“Air quality in this city is very, very bad. It has an averse impact on our health,” Singh, an expert on the damaging impacts of e-waste, told AFP.
Health worsening
WHO in 2016 reported that 10 of the world’s top-20 polluted cities were in India, including four in the enormous state of Uttar Pradesh east of Delhi.
Moradabad is just a dot on the map in this impoverished state — which at 200 million people has the population of a large country.
But its dire air is emblematic of the annual pollution scourge that stretches far beyond Delhi as burning crops, industrial smog and car emissions blend with cool, still air to create a toxic mix.
In the capital, local authorities shut brick kilns and industrial sites in an attempt to curb conditions described by the city’s chief minister as a “gas chamber”.
But in Moradabad, the city’s mainstay industry in e-waste scavenging roars on.