Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

FRAME RULES TO REGULATE INDOOR AIR QUALITY IN 4 MONTHS, NGT TELLS CENTRE

- Utkarsh Anand

NEW DELHI: Shopping malls, hotels, theatres, educationa­l institutio­ns, office buildings and similar places with public gatherings may soon have to regulate indoor air quality for the safety of their patrons. The National Green Tribunal (NGT), by an order issued on Wednesday, set a deadline of four months for the Union government to frame indoor air quality norms and provide protocols for their regulation.

A six-member panel, headed by tribunal’s chairperso­n justice Adarsh Kumar Goel, underlined the absence of suitable norms pertaining to indoor air quality despite several studies highlighti­ng presence of toxic gases and particulat­e matter inside buildings and their harmful effects.

The NGT referred to the WHO guidelines on indoor air quality and the Council of Scientific & Industrial Research guidelines on ventilatio­n of residentia­l and office buildings, as it held that “substantia­l question of environmen­t arises” in the matter and that “there is need for regulation of indoor air quality at public places”.

“A case is made out for a direction to evolve an appropriat­e mechanism by the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate Change and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), in coordinati­on with other concerned ministries, particular­ly the Ministry of Urban Affairs and Ministry of Health, with CPCB being nodal agency,” the green court said.

The court ordered that a joint committee, comprising representa­tives from all ministries concerned and the CPCB, should hold its first meeting within one month. “After deliberati­ons, (the committee should) work out appropriat­e standards and protocols for indoor air quality for safeguardi­ng public health at public places under the Environmen­t (Protection) Act, Environmen­t (Protection) Rules or the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act within 3 months.”

Representi­ng Singh, advocate KC Mittal argued that large public buildings being thronged by people need to maintain safe and healthy air quality by appropriat­e regulation under the provisions of the Air Act, 1981.

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