The Hindu (Kolkata)

Meghalaya’s Byrnihat most polluted ‘city’ in India

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Meghalaya’s Byrnihat, an industrial town on the border with Assam, was the most polluted ‘city’ in India during February, data released by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) said on Friday.

The study, based on the monthly average of (particulat­e matter) PM2.5, has put the spotlight on hazardous air pollution levels in urban centres across the States in the northeast, otherwise considered the greenest part of the country.

According to the CREA report, Byrnihat recorded a monthly average PM2.5 concentrat­ion of 183 μg/ m3, which was around 60

m3 higher than in Bihar’s Araria, the secondmost polluted city in the country.

Hapur in Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan’s Hanumangar­h were the third and the fourth most polluted cities.

The PM2.5 levels in Byrnihat were also almost 1.8 times the PM2.5 concentrat­ion recorded for Delhi for the same period, which was the 14th most polluted city in India for February 2024.

The other urban centres in the northeast which made it to the list of 30 most polluted cities in India in February were Nalbari (5th), Agartala (12th), Guwahati (19th), and Nagaon (28th), highlighti­ng the worsening pollution levels across the region.

Out of 11 cities with continuous ambient air quality monitoring stations in the northeaste­rn States, six recorded PM2.5 levels beyond the prescribed daily National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) by the Central Pollution Control Board.

Cleanest cities

Sivasagar, Silchar, Aizawl, and Imphal recorded monthly average PM2.5 concentrat­ions below the NAAQS and were the cleanest cities in the region.

Sivasagar was the second cleanest city in India, followed by Silchar from the area at the 23rd spot.

The cleanest was Satna in Madhya Pradesh and the third cleanest was Vijayapura in Karnataka.

However, none of the cities complied with the WHOsafe guideline concentrat­ions for PM2.5, the study said.

“The data emphasise the pressing need for significan­tly bolstering air quality monitoring in the northeaste­rn States to track air pollution levels effectivel­y,” Sunil Dahiya, a South Asia analyst at CREA, said.

“These States, once renowned for their pristine environmen­t, are now witnessing a concerning shift due to unregulate­d industrial operations, inadequate public transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, rampant constructi­on lacking efficient pollution control measures, and other contributi­ng factors,” he said.

On the brighter side, there was a significan­t improvemen­t in air quality in February with 36 cities falling into the ‘good’ category. This was 14 more than the 22 ‘good’ urban centres in January.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Rising pollution: Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air released data on polluted cities in India.
FILE PHOTO Rising pollution: Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air released data on polluted cities in India.

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