Eastern Eye (UK)

New Delhi sees toxic smog a day after festival

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NEW DELHI woke to toxic smog on Tuesday (25) after Diwali revellers defied a firecracke­r ban and risked jail to celebrate the annual Hindu festival.

According to internatio­nal monitoring company IQAir, harmful PM 2.5 particles surged to 350 on the air quality index -more than three times the reading a day earlier.

The reading for the particulat­es – so tiny they can penetrate deep into the lungs and enter the bloodstrea­m – is more than 23 times the recommende­d daily maximum set by the World Health Organizati­on.

The PM 2.5 reading had eased to around 145 by mid-morning, still nearly 10 times the WHO limit. A report by IQAir in 2020 found that 22 of the world’s 30 most polluted cities were in India. New Delhi imposed a ban on the sale and use of firecracke­rs last month and announced that those flouting the ban could face up to six months in jail.

Many of the Indian capital’s roughly 20 million residents were still able to get hold of firecracke­rs, setting them alight into the early hours.

However, broadcaste­r NDTV reported Delhi’s pollution levels after Monday’s Diwali celebratio­ns year were the lowest in four years. The festival fell relatively early this year in mild weather.

Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said residents were “working hard” and that there had been encouragin­g results.

“But there is still a long way to go,” he tweeted early Tuesday.

Diwali is celebrated at roughly the same time when farmers in neighbouri­ng states burn stubble after their harvest.

Firecracke­r smoke combines with farm fires and industrial and vehicular emissions to form a toxic cocktail blamed for huge numbers of premature deaths.

A Lancet report in 2020 said almost 17,500 people died in Delhi in 2019 because of air pollution. Across south Asia, the average person would live five years longer if levels of fine particulat­e matter met WHO standards, according to the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute.

 ?? ?? HARMFUL: Firecracke­r smoke combines with farm fires and industrial and vehicular emissions to form a toxic cocktail in New Delhi
HARMFUL: Firecracke­r smoke combines with farm fires and industrial and vehicular emissions to form a toxic cocktail in New Delhi

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