The Borneo Post

New Delhi half-marathon tries radio waves to beat city’s toxic smog

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NEW Delhi’s hal f- marathon race used ultra high frequency ( UHF) radio waves to clear the air for the runners on Sunday, an experiment­al technique the organisers hope could improve the city’s notorious air quality.

India is home to the world’s 14 most polluted cities. Last year the smoke from burning crop waste and thousands of firecracke­rs contribute­d to a toxic smog that blanketed the capital of New Delhi and a large part of northern India in toxic smog.

The city’s Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal warned New Dehli would face the same fate this year if Narendra Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party did not do more to combat pollution.

After medical experts urged the cancelling of last year’s race, marathon organisers responded by bringing t he race date forward to October, away from November’s Diwali festival when the firecracke­rs are set off.

They also tried to dampen down the dust that hangs over the city in winter, including reagents from the mining industry to treat roads, dropping water vapour along the course from a height of 20 feet.

The techniques also included using the UHF waves to dispel pollution from particulat­e matter measuring only 2.5 microns, known as PM2.5, whose small size - about 30 times smaller than a human hair - allows it to lodge deep in the lungs, damaging the respirator­y system.

“It was a g reat day with clear skies and no pollutionr­elated incidents among our 35,000 runners,” Vivek Singh, a managing director of race promoter Procam Internatio­nal told Reuters.

He said the Delhi government, which last year resorted to shutting power stations and banning some cars from roads to clear the air, should look at using the UHF technology, manufactur­ed by a Bangalore-based company Devic Earth, to mitigate pollution.

“We have shown that it works and made a point to tel l the authoritie­s,” he added.

Pictures of the event, which began at 5 a.m. (0030 GMT) showed relatively clear skies, with the early morning sun visible through a sight haze.

“I did doubt signing up, but it was just the usual morning haze, and didn’t feel hard to run in,” said Emily Jackson, a British carbon market analyst living in New Delhi who competed in the race for the first time.

“I only saw one person with a mask.”

Singh said the measures had reduced pollution by “at least” 30 percent during the race, though air quality at monitoring stations near the route were still rated as “very unhealthy” under internatio­nal standards.

The women’s race was won by Ethiopian Tsehay Gemechu in a course- record time of 1: 06: 50, whi le teenage compat r iot Andamalak Belihu finished first in the men’s race with a time of 59:18. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An Indian runner wears a face mask as he participat­es in the New Delhi half marathon in the Indian capital. — AFP photo
An Indian runner wears a face mask as he participat­es in the New Delhi half marathon in the Indian capital. — AFP photo

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