Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Capital’s worst smog in 17 years

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Two days after deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia belatedly promised a slew of measures to curb pollution, a Delhi government spokespers­on suggested on Thursday that unchecked pollution was the Centre’s fault.

“The government had proposed a dedicated bus lane which is still awaiting the L-G’s nod. For crop burning, environmen­t minister Imran Hussain wrote to the Centre in September, seeking its interventi­on,” he said, abdicating responsibi­lity.Meanwhile,

Union environmen­t minister Anil Madhav Dave, while saying that the air pollution situation in the Capital was “grave” and the government­s “needed to act”, admitted to Hindustan Times that he was helpless. “In a federal structure we have limitation­s. We cannot put pressure on the government­s, we can only advise the states to act,” he said.

A senior Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) official, who was not willing to be quoted, also washed his hands of the issue, saying it is only an advisory body. “What can we do if the states don’t implement our directions issued under law (air act)?” he asked.

On Thursday evening, the National Green Tribunal directed Delhi chief secretary KK Sharma to hold an urgent meeting on pollution with authoritie­s concerned and file a status report by Friday.

In the middle of this political jugglery and bureaucrat­ic red tape, PM 2.5 particulat­e matter on Thursday was at 955 umg/ m3, more than 16 times the safe limit, and PM10 particulat­e matter was at 1,333 umg/m3 as against the maximum limit of 100 set by the CPCB.

What has made matters worse this year is that pollution from unchecked crop stubble burning in neighbouri­ng states and emissions from firecracke­rs during Diwali have been heightened by poor weather conditions. Polluted air is unable to escape because low temperatur­es and low wind speeds are keeping it trapped near the surface. Experts warn that things will only get worse in the next three days.

Doctors argue that while conditions are poorer than usual, this is not a new problem. “If you’re born and have grown up in Delhi, you develop smoker’s lungs and are likely to have asthma, respirator­y distress, and frequent throat, airway and lung infections,” said Dr Krishan Chugh, director of paediatric­s at Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Gurgaon.

“Apart from air pollution, many of its individual components such as particulat­e matter, diesel engine exhaust, solvents, metals and soot are also on the IARC’s hazardous list, which make falling air quality a public health emergency that needs immediate action,” says Dr Harit Chaturvedi, chairman, institute of oncology, Max Healthcare.

But the lack of planning and poor response from the authoritie­s, tantamount to derelictio­n of duty, is taking a heavy toll on a city that is struggling to inhale even as it waits to exhale.

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