The Jerusalem Post

Air-pollution levels during Lag Ba’omer festivitie­s reach 10.9 times normal values

- • By SHARON UDASIN

After Israelis kindled Lag Ba’omer bonfires for the second night in a row on Sunday, air-pollution levels climbed to up to 10.9 times greater than typical values in areas around the country.

The nation’s skies filled with a black smoky fog throughout the night, contaminat­ing the air with particulat­e matter that can negatively impact the respirator­y system, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry. While some people lit fires at the originally scheduled time for the holiday, Saturday night, most did so on Sunday night after the Lag Ba’omer school holiday was moved from Sunday to Monday.

Air-pollution levels reached their peak between late night Sunday and 4:30 a.m. on Monday morning, the ministry said.

One of the most problemati­c consequenc­es of the bonfires each year is the marked increase in the concentrat­ion of PM2.5 – fine particulat­e matter with a diameter of 2.5 microns or less, the ministry said. Although levels of PM10 – particulat­e matter with a diameter of 10 microns or less – also rose, the finer 2.5-micron particulat­e matter is capable of passing into much smaller airways in the human body, the ministry warned.

Levels of PM2.5 rose to 10.9 times higher than those on an average clear day in Jerusalem’s Beit Hakerem neighborho­od, 9.9 times higher in the central moshav of Bnei Darom, seven times higher in Ashdod, 6.7 times higher in Gedera and 6.6 times higher in Bnei Brak, ministry data showed.

Levels of PM10 were 8.9 times higher than those on an average clear day in Rehovot, 7.5 times higher in Tel Aviv’s southern neighborho­ods and 4.4 times higher in Beersheba, the ministry said.

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 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? HAREDIM WATCH a Lag Ba’omer bonfire burn on Sunday.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) HAREDIM WATCH a Lag Ba’omer bonfire burn on Sunday.

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