Gulf News

Delhi chokes on severe smog as farm fires soar

SCIENTISTS WARN THIS YEAR’S POLLUTION SEASON CAN MAKE 20M RESIDENTS MORE VULNERABLE TO CORONAVIRU­S

- NEWDELHI

New Delhi was blanketed in noxious haze yesterday as air pollution levels in parts of the city soared to “severe” levels, hours after US President Donald Trump described the air in the vast nation as “filthy”.

Smoke from agricultur­al burning, vehicle fumes and industrial emissions — combined with cooler temperatur­es and slow- moving winds that trap pollutants over the city — turns air in the Indian capital into a toxic soup every winter.

The air quality index at Delhi’s 36 pollution monitoring sites - which monitors tiny PM2.5 and PM10 particles that get into the bloodstrea­m and vital organs - was between 282 and 446, pushing levels into the “severe” category, the Central Pollution Control Board said.

The “good” category is between 0- 50, the government’s environmen­tal watchdog added.

A “significan­t increase in stubble fire count” to 1,213 in Haryana and Punjab states was the highest of this season and made up 17 per cent of Delhi’s PM2.5 levels, the state- run System of Air Quality Weather Forecastin­g and Research added yesterday.

“Further deteriorat­ion of ( air quality) is expected for the two days,” SAFAR said.

This season’s burning started earlier because of advanced sowing and harvesting by farmers amid fears of labour shortages during the coronaviru­s pandemic, officials said.

Vulnerable to Covid- 19

The worsening conditions came as Trump complained that action on climate change was unfair to the US.

“Look at China, how filthy it is. Look at Russia, look at India - it’s filthy. The air is filthy,” Trump said at his presidenti­al debate with Democratic rival

Joe Biden.

Scientists warned this year’s pollution season would make Delhi’s 20 million residents more vulnerable to the coronaviru­s.

“Air pollution increases the risk of noncommuni­cable diseases - the same underlying conditions that make people more likely to experience severe illness or death from Covid19,” epidemiolo­gist Sumi Mehta from global non- profit Vital Strategies told AFP.

Winter worries

Healthcare systems, stretched by the pandemic, could be further stressed by more hospitalis­ations from pollution- related illnesses, researcher­s added.

“There are serious worries that during winter when higher air pollution levels in any case worsens respirator­y illness and increases hospitalis­ation, the vulnerabil­ity to Covid- 19 may be further enhanced,” Anumita Roy Chowdhury of the Delhi- based Centre for Science and Environmen­t told AFP. The chief medical officer of Gurugram city near New Delhi, Virender Yadav, told The Times of India on Thursday some recovering Covid- 19 patients were experienci­ng a reoccurenc­e of respirator­y conditions triggered by the heightened air pollution.

The air quality index at Delhi’s 36 pollution monitoring sites - which monitors tiny PM2.5 and PM10 particles that get into the bloodstrea­m and vital organs - was between 282 and 446, pushing levels into the “severe” category. The “good” category is between 0- 50, the Central Pollution Control Board said.

 ?? Reuters ?? Trafficmov­es on a smoggy morning in New Delhi yesterday.
Reuters Trafficmov­es on a smoggy morning in New Delhi yesterday.

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