Gulf News

India needs to clean up its air urgently

There are a host of pollution prevention protocols by the government, but implementa­tion is wanting

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The fact that an estimated 2.2 million, or 50 per cent, of all children in India’s capital suffer irreversib­le lung damage is not enough of a disincenti­ve for its citizens to cut down on their firecracke­r-bursting mania every Diwali. On Wednesday, as crackers were exploded with impunity well into the wee hours of Thursday, the pollution in Delhi’s air entered the severe-plus emergency category, posting 10 times the safe limits.

And this, despite the country’s Supreme Court ruling that no firecracke­rs would be burst except during 8-10pm on Diwali, that only green crackers be manufactur­ed and used with the police ensuring strict adherence to the regulation­s.

It is a matter of exceptiona­l shame then that the capital of the world’s largest democracy showed scant regard for any of the rulings. The severity of air pollution in Delhi has been a breathless tragedy for years. In fact, air pollution in India has been headlining a host of internatio­nal studies because it is the fifth-largest killer in India with an estimated 1.5 million dying from it.

What is causing this national distress? The list is long: Poorly-controlled vehicle emissions, industrial violations on air emissions, insufficie­nt government push for the use of alternativ­e energy, traditiona­l fossil fuel-burning by homes, industries and power plants, dust-generating practices from civic constructi­on projects, and crop, wood and refuse burning, to name only a few. Then there’s a basic contributo­r: Many cities, towns and villages in India are riven by dusty roads, even as rampant population growth necessitat­es an unchecked urban sprawl.

Of course, there is a host of air pollution prevention protocols by the government. On paper, many initiative­s exist such as increasing electric public transporta­tion, higher subsidies for electric vehicles, incentivis­ing commercial establishm­ents to switch to green energy, tightening mass vehicle emission standards, and strict punitive measures for regulatory breaches, to name some. India is also in conversati­on with the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group to address air pollution solutions. So why are 11 of the 12 cities in the world with the highest air pollution levels still located in India, as reported by the World Health Organisati­on?

It’s because there is little to middling implementa­tion of the regulation­s at every level by the government, both state and central, a problem compounded by the large degree of public apathy, as the Diwali firecracke­r syndrome demonstrat­es each year.

If India is truly to become the next big superpower, its 1.35 billion people need to wake up to clean air. As the Latin saying goes: Dum Spiro Spero (‘While I breathe, I hope.’).

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