Muscat Daily

135,000 deaths

-

In the past five years, air pollution has worsened in Pakistan, as a mixture of low-grade diesel fumes, smoke from seasonal crop burn off, and colder winter temperatur­es coalesce into stagnant clouds of smog.

In 2015, 135,000 Pakistanis died due to poor air quality, according to a study published in the scientific journal The Lancet.

Pollution tends to be at its worst in the country’s eastern province of Punjab during winter, particular­ly in the 12mn strong city of Lahore near the border with India.

In November schools were closed for several days across the province with the level of PM2.5 - tiny particles that get into the bloodstrea­m and vital organs - repeatedly exceeding 200 micrograms per cubic metre of air.

The World Health Organizati­on’s (WHO) recommende­d safe daily maximum is a measuremen­t of 25.

Pakistan is ranked one of the worst countries in the world for air quality and Lahore consistent­ly ranked in the top ten most smog-hit cities, according to the pollution monitoring site AirVisual.

But Tanveer Waraich, director general of the Punjab’s environmen­tal agency, dismisses those figures, saying pollution readings cited by monitors and activists are not from ‘authentic machines’.

“To say that Pakistan and Lahore are among the top polluted cities… this statement is not based on facts,” he says, but concedes the country’s air quality is largely unacceptab­le.

Public awareness about the issue is growing due to increased activism on social media about the dangers of pollution and the dire challenges climate change is bringing to Pakistan.

Yann Boquillod, who cofounded AirVisual, said subscriber­s to the site from Pakistan have increased tenfold this year.

“In Pakistan, there was a problem but no one knew about it. Pakistanis are (now) mobilising,” Boquillod says.

‘Gas chamber’

With officials slow to act, ordinary Pakistanis have increasing­ly taken measures into their own hands.

In 2016, Abid Omar launched the website PakistanAi­rQuality (PAQ) dedicated to compiling data about air pollution in the country and publishing its findings.

According to PAQ, Lahore only experience­d ‘10 hours’ of good quality air based on WHO standards during the first eleven months of 2019.

Conversely, air quality in the city oscillated between ‘bad’ and ‘hazardous’ for a total of 223 days so far this year.

The smog ‘has made our lives miserable’, laments a pedestrian in Lahore buying a mask.

Pressure on officials is building.

Ahmad Rafay Alam, one of the few environmen­tal lawyers in Pakistan, filed a suit against the Punjab provincial government on behalf of his daughter and two other teenagers in November, saying officials having underrepor­ted the problem.

Outside of activism and lawsuits, others are trying to minimise their exposure to the harmful toxins in the air.

“Last year, it was just bizarre how everybody seemed not concerned,” says Ayza Omar, director of interiorso­urce.pk, a site offering high-quality face masks and other anti-smog products.

“This year, it has been crazy. We were sold out within the first two months,” she adds, saying they sold thousands of masks this year compared to dozens last year.

In an attempt to improve the situation in Lahore, a group of environmen­talists are planning to unveil an eight-metre-high air purifier in attempt to remove harmful particles from the air.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A man rides his donkey cart amid heavy smog conditions in Lahore on December 6
(AFP) A man rides his donkey cart amid heavy smog conditions in Lahore on December 6

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman