Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Lockdown spells cleaner air with stubble burning at lowest in 5 yrs

- Joydeep Thakur letters@hindustant­imes.com

nKOLKATA: The heavily polluted Indo-gangetic plains have recorded the lowest agricultur­e residue burning this year since 2016, satellite images from US space agency NASA have shown.

Researcher­s and government officials said of the several reasons behind the decline in the springtime farm fire count could be the nationwide lockdown after the outbreak of Covid-19.

“Springtime fire activities (mostly agricultur­al) over the Indo-gangetic Plain have been the lowest this year in comparison to the last five years during the Covid-19-led lockdown period,” Hiren Jethva, a researcher from Universiti­es Space Research Associatio­n at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, tweeted on Saturday.

Graphs and data tweeted by

Jethva showed that while in 2016 the cumulative fire count between April 15 and May 15 was around 70,000, in 2020 the figure has come down to around 10,000 during the same period across various north and central Indian states located in the plains. In 2019, the fire count registered a rise, the data shows.

Top officials from the state pollution control boards of Punjab and Haryana confirmed that there has been a drop in stubble burning incidents this year.

“In 2019 there were 5,768 such incidents in Haryana till May 15. In 2020 we have recorded 2,430 incidents. The lockdown could be one reason. A clearer picture will emerge when the harvest is completed by May-end,” said S Narayanan, member secretary of the Haryana Pollution Control Board. “We have seen the NASA maps and analysed fire counts in the National Capital Region. The restrictio­ns during the lockdown and the shortage of labour could be the reasons,” said Anumita Roy Chowdhury executive director (research and advocacy) at the Centre for Science and Environmen­t in New Delhi.

The reasons notwithsta­nding, the fall in air pollution levels should come as welcome news. As HT has reported earlier, SARS-COV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, can cling to air pollutants. Also, air pollution is likely to be a major risk factor for coronaviru­s disease mortality, scientists have concluded.

“There has been a definite decline in the number of fire incidents. The reasons behind this need to be verified. It could provide vital inputs for future,” said Sagnik Dey, coordinato­r of the Center of Excellence for Research on Clean Air and associate professor at the Centre for Atmospheri­c Sciences at IIT, Delhi.

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