Millennium Post

SEASONAL AIR POLLUTION

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Every year before winter, northern India suffers from air pollution, and then comes Diwali, the festival of lights. The air quality becomes toxic to the extent that it can choke the lungs causing death. Air pollution is responsibl­e for 10,000 to 30,000 deaths in Delhi every year. It is also the fifth leading cause of deaths in India, a report by the Centre for Science and Environmen­t (CSE) had stated in 2015.

“First, let us be clear, Delhi has its own sources of pollution and the arrival of winter plays a big role in shooting up air pollution levels. This is also the time when stubble burning takes place across parts of northern India. But the reason that pollution peaks in winters is not only because of the farmers in Punjab and Haryana who are burning their crop stubble at this time. Our discussion should be beyond stubble burning,” says Anumita Roychoudhu­ry, the executive director of CSE.

It has been noted that pollution is worse in winters because of adverse weather conditions, which lead to inversion (cold air settles); moisture (traps the pollutants) and poor wind (does not allow for dispersion). This is why even though the sources of pollution remain constant throughout the year, the level of pollution peaks in winters.

Air pollution here results from the combinatio­n of a rapid increase in pollution sources due to unplanned urbanisati­on and the geographic­al disadvanta­ge of this landlocked region that makes it extremely vulnerable to winter inversion leading to a massive drop in air quality. Delhi does not have any clean water body nor a coastline and, moreover, the Himalayas in the north blocks the path of the air flow in the winter as the wind becomes heavy and flows downwards.

Air pollution is an emergency concern, which caused the Supreme Court to take cognizance of it in the late 1990s. A statutory body, the Environmen­t Pollution (Prevention and Control)

Every year, Diwali comes and our cities are choked with air pollution. But, with the end of winter, the situation changes and the authoritie­s quietly forget the crisis

Authority, also known as the EPCA, was constitute­d by the central government in 1998 at the behest of the Supreme Court. The EPCA formulated an emergency action plan to tackle pollution, known as the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP). Last year in October, when air quality touched the ‘severe’ category, GRAP was imposed. Eventually, the emergency plan worked and the pollution level was in control.

GRAP has various rules and restrictio­ns based on air quality, but we should remember that it is an emergency plan and not a permanent solution. This year, when EPCA raised its concerns to the Supreme Court explaining the mandatory implementa­tion of this plan every year till a permanent solution can be found, the apex court observed that GRAP will be imposed every year from October 15 to March 15.

“Despite the many rules, we should all remember that people have to come out and spread awareness on pollution because it’s a public health concern. Also, we cannot depend on GRAP to tackle pollution every year,” Roychoudhu­ry added. first time in India.

According to Dr Rakesh Kumar, the Director of CSIR-NEERI, the green crackers do not contain harmful chemicals and, hence, do not cause air pollution. Scientists have given these crackers names: Safe Water Releaser (SWAS), Safe Thermite Cracker (STAR) and Safe Minimal Aluminium (SAFAL). These crackers do not contain aluminium, barium, potassium nitrate and carbon, which are considered to be the major pollutants. “With green crackers, the emission is reduced by 15-30 per cent and these are not harmful. We have made these crackers with utmost care and after a lot of research. These crackers will give the same pleasure of burning but will not cause pollution, which was our goal,” said Kumar.

However, the capital’s cracker markets were quite clueless about such crackers which had reportedly reached restricted markets this year. Next year, the green crackers will hit the market and only then would the effect be clear. Keeping in mind the manufactur­ing of such crackers and the huge demand it would garner, the formula of manufactur­ing would be shared with private entities. There is already a doubt hanging over this process.

In India, crackers are manufactur­ed unscientif­ically and if the authoritie­s do not come up with separate rules for the manufactur­ing of

In the last few years, on one side there have been discussion­s on green Diwali but on the other side, there has been a severe destructio­n of greenery. In Delhi, for various redevelopm­ent projects, nearly 30,000 trees were supposed to be cut. However, under public duress, major redevelopm­ent projects were stalled with direction from the court. But several trees have already been felled.

“The irony is that in India the states play a major role in the destructio­n of greenery and, when winter arrives, they look for an emergency plan to control pollution,” said Vimlendu Jha, an environmen­talist.

Last week, over 1,200 residents of Gurugram and Delhi made their way to the Aravali Biodiversi­ty Park early Sunday morning to protest against the National Highways Authority of India’s (NHAI) and Gurugram Metropolit­an Developmen­t Authority’s (GMDA) decision to construct a six-lane, 2-km expressway cutting through the eastern-half of the forest cover.

All such projects are being undertaken and monitored by several state government­s and the Centre. “Environmen­tal issues are yet to become an agenda of electoral politics; hence, none of the manifestos talks about the preservati­on of the environmen­t. The time is now as the situation is changing,” said Jha.

Every year, Diwali comes and our cities are choked with air pollution. But, with the end of winter, the situation changes and the authoritie­s quietly forget the crisis. The absence of mediated action is killing many tomorrows. Children are suffering from asthma, death due to pollution is on the rise and hospital beds are filled to the brim with breathing-disorder patients. However, there is silence. A silence of negligence, a silence of avoidance, a silence of priorities and a silence on giving everyone their right to breathe fresh. Hoping for a green Diwali is unlikely to make the festival green – but understand­ing and working to fix this health emergency might bring a green India someday.

GREEN CRACKERS

KILLING THE GREEN

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