Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Interest in air pollution only during winter in north India

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INADEQUATE HT analyses the framework in place to monitor air quality across regions

luru and Hyderabad — the air quality was beyond the ‘poor’ standard on just 4% of the days. On 96% of the days, the air was either ‘good’, ‘moderate’ or ‘satisfacto­ry’.

Not all people living in north India can think of migrating to cleaner regions during winter despite the fact that health hazards due to air pollution are too dangerous to ignore.

This underlines the need for putting in place a holistic strategy to deal with air pollution.

The first prerequisi­te of formulatin­g any such strategy is the availabili­ty of detailed data, across time and regions, on pollution.

An HT analysis shows there are big gaps on all counts.

The online portal of the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) provides air quality data from government-operated air quality monitoring stations across the country.

According to data on the CPCB website, there are 94 such monitoring stations across 53 cities. But not all of them function regularly.

In 2017, at least 54 stations functioned for more than nine months. But 26 stations had data for less than three months. Still, this is an improvemen­t. In 2015, just 19 stations functioned for more than nine months. (See Chart 2)

Non-functionin­g stations are not a problem in just smaller cities. For instance, in Kolkata, no PM2.5 data for 2017 is available on the CPCB website.

Most cities neither have enough stations nor do they cover all pollutants.

For example, only 23 cities had at least one monitoring station providing PM2.5 data for more than 80% of the days.

Of this, 17 had just one station. Delhi had the most: nine active monitoring stations, as per the CPCB portal. Other organisa- tions, such as SAFAR, have their own monitors but are not part of the CPCB portal.

The lack of stations is problemati­c: a single station doesn’t capture the spatial distributi­on of pollution in the city.

“This (single stations) is inadequate as it generates a statistica­lly insignific­ant sample to represent the city or the range of sources contributi­ng to the air pollution problem in the city,” says the website of Urban Emissions (India), an independen­t research group on air pollution.

Based on a thumb rule proposed by CPCB and the districtle­vel urban and rural population (as per 2011 census), Urban Emissions estimate “the need for 4,000 continuous monitoring stations (2,800 urban and 1,200 rural) to spatially, temporally, and statistica­lly represent the PM2.5 pollution in the urban and the rural areas of India.”

Sarath Guttikunda, the director of Urban Emissions, estimates that the government would need to spend ₹7,500 crore every year for the next 10 years.

Here’s hoping that the New Year would see Parliament demanding more funds for improving pollution monitoring than seeking greener pastures during Delhi’s toxic winter.

SOURCE: CPCB, HT CALCULATIO­NS

 ?? HT FILE ?? It is a known fact that peninsular India is much better in terms of air quality than the northern parts.
HT FILE It is a known fact that peninsular India is much better in terms of air quality than the northern parts.

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