Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Delhi’s plans on paper, and poison in the air

The Capital will have to turn to strict norms and stringent enforcemen­t to survive impending air emergency

- Soumya Pillai soumya. pillai@ htlive. com

NEW DELHI: Delhi’s air quality slipped to the far end of the “very poor” zone on Friday, raising a belated panic alarm among the city’s pollution monitoring and enforcemen­t agencies, and prompting experts to say that the authoritie­s were once again waking up too late and were likely to do too little to manage the crisis.

With so-called pre-emptive measures listed under the winter segment of the Supreme Courtappro­ved Graded Response Action Plan (Grap) already in place, the Capital will now have to turn to strict restrictio­ns and stringent enforcemen­t to survive the impending air emergency — one that brings the city to its knees every year as grand plans on paper are unable to stop the air from turning poisonous.

Starting October 15, the Environmen­t Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority (Epca), enforced several preventive measures listed under the “very poor” category, including banning diesel generator sets, starting mechanised sweeping, and closely monitoring the garbage burning ban, among other steps. Despite this, Delhi’s air quality index (AQI) on Friday was 366, and about 12 of the 35 monitoring stations in the city were over the “severe” 400 mark for large parts of the day.

According to an Indian Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) forecast, the situation is only expected to get worse over the weekend, plunging the city into a public health emergency, as the surface wind-speed remains low and noxious air is carried from farm fires in Punjab, Haryana.

In the middle of this spike, measures envisaged by Epca to control the slide, appear to be having little effect. The body’s chairperso­n, Bhure Lal, admitted on Friday that all major preventive measures are already in pace, and said the onus was now down to enforcemen­t.

“All measures listed under Grap are already in place, which means that enforcemen­t will be the key now. The government­s in Delhi and other NCR states (Haryana and Uttar Pradesh) have been instructed to ensure that water sprinkling is done through the weekend, and any violation of dust control norms, operation of illegal industries and open burning of waste needs to be kept in check,” Lal said.

Sunita Narain, also an Epca member, said they will be “watching the situation” for next two days, but there is “no further action suggested”.

According to Grap, first implemente­d in 2017 through the Supreme Court-appointed Epca, if the air quality continues to be “very poor” for 48 hours, strict measures such as enhancing parking fees three to four times need to be brought in.

But with the Capital still reeling under the Covid crisis, Epca is considerin­g whether it would be feasible to enforce this provision -- both from the point of view of economic activity of common citizens, and the importance of parking collection­s for the cash- strapped municipal agencies. The next steps, which come into force under the “severe” category -- if the AQI is above 400 for 48 hours -- are bans on the entry of trucks, on industries running on coal being asked to cease operations, and implementi­ng oddeven road rationing for private vehicles. Epca is again grappling with the feasibilit­y of these ideas in the time of Covid -- constructi­on agencies, for example, have reached out to the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) asking that no bans been enforced this year, irrespecti­ve of the air quality, because work is already behind due to the Covid-19 lockdown -- and Delhi’s environmen­t minister Gopal Rai has already described the odd-even scheme as the “last weapon”.

Rai on Friday said that while Delhi is going into this “war against pollution”, there are certain limitation­s this year, and the government is looking at “alternativ­e measures” that can yield similar results.

“We are dealing with a peculiar time now, but that does not mean we will sit idle and wait for the pollution levels to spike beyond control. We have launched the ‘red light on, gaadi off’ campaign across the city to reduce vehicular emissions causing by idling in traffic signals and we will also launch a campaign to promote green crackers before Diwali,” Rai said.

“People of Delhi will come together and fight pollution, but there are certain things that are not in our hands. What do we do when have to bear the consequenc­es of mass farm fires in Punjab and Haryana,” he added.

But this sense of uncertaint­y -both from Epca and the state government — begs a key question: Why is the city once again at a point where it is wondering how to tackle the pollution crisis only when the emergency has already begun?

Tulsi Kumar, who specialise­s in air quality trends in the IndoGanget­ic Plains, said the authoritie­s cannot wake up right before winter season every time.

 ?? BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT ?? AUGUST 22, 2020
A much clearer day two months ago.
BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT AUGUST 22, 2020 A much clearer day two months ago.
 ?? VIPIN KUMAR/HT ?? A blanket of haze covers India Gate at Rajpath.
VIPIN KUMAR/HT A blanket of haze covers India Gate at Rajpath.

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