Khaleej Times

Smog to blanket Karachi for next couple of days: Met

- Dawn

Right now, the land and sea temperatur­es are almost the same, due to which the wind has stopped blowing and this was why smog has formed in Karachi

Shahid Abbas, Regional Meteorolog­ical Centre Karachi Director

karachi — Unusual smog-like conditions prevailed in Karachi on Wednesday morning, causing poor visibility and difficulty for drivers in various parts of the city, along with exacerbati­ng respirator­y issues in people suffering from asthma, reports online.

Regional Meteorolog­ical Centre Karachi Director Shahid Abbas, while explaining the weather in the metropolis, said that fog or smog is formed “when minimum temperatur­e falls rapidly”.

“Right now, the land and sea temperatur­e are almost the same, due to which the wind has stopped blowing,” he said, adding that this was why “smog has formed in Karachi”.

“It will remain for the next two or three days until winds from Quetta start blowing here. Then the smog will disperse and it will get two to three degrees colder,” he said.

He ruled out the possibilit­y of rain in Sindh over the next few days.

“There are rains in parts of Punjab

— Sialkot and Gujranwala — but the [weather] system is passing overhead and there is no chance of rain in Sindh,” he explained.

However, “the air temperatur­e will lower and dry winds will begin blowing, which will clear the atmosphere.”

Earlier, a Met official, requesting anonymity, said that the ratio of humidity in the air is around 32 per cent. He added that Nawabshah, Sukkur, Dadu, Hyderabad, Jacobabad, and Sakrund are also affected due to the situation. Smog has become a common feature of the winter season in parts of the country, particular­ly Punjab. The condition has been attributed to the burning of crop stubble, and pollution from factories and traffic in the province. Burning of crop stubble across the border has also aggravated the situation locally.

A list of the 50 worst air pollutant emission hotspots in the world by Greenpeace which analysed the satellite data generated by European Space Agency’s new satellite ranked Lahore and its surroundin­g area at 30th place. —

 ?? AFP ?? Heavy smog conditions are seen over a busy road in karachi on Wednesday. rains have reduced lingering air pollution across the region, but smog levels remained around 383 AQi in karachi — significan­tly higher than the recommende­d WHo safe levels. —
AFP Heavy smog conditions are seen over a busy road in karachi on Wednesday. rains have reduced lingering air pollution across the region, but smog levels remained around 383 AQi in karachi — significan­tly higher than the recommende­d WHo safe levels. —

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