Business Day

New Delhi smog a health emergency

- Agency Staff New Delhi /AFP

Millions of people in New Delhi are suffering in what the Indian capital’s chief minister has called a “gas chamber” of poisonous smog that has prompted authoritie­s to declare a public health emergency.

Millions of people in New Delhi are suffering in what the Indian capital’s chief minister has called a “gas chamber” of poisonous smog that has prompted authoritie­s to declare a public health emergency.

Here are key facts on the crisis in the world’s most polluted capital city:

WORST POLLUTION IN YEARS

New Delhi has seen a growing pollution problem each winter for the past decade, but despite efforts to control the annual onslaught, current levels are the worst in three years.

On Monday morning, the concentrat­ion of PM2.5 — fine particles of less than 2.5 microns that can enter the bloodstrea­m and penetrate the lungs and heart — was at 613, nearly 25 times the safe limit set by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO), according to the US embassy in Delhi. On Sunday it approached 1,000.

High levels of PM2.5 are linked to chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease. Greenpeace says more than 1.2million Indians died prematurel­y in 2017 due to air pollution.

TOXIC COCKTAIL

New Delhi is hit each year by a near perfect storm of pollution that takes hold immediatel­y after the Hindu festival of Diwali in late October, when millions of revellers let off firecracke­rs.

On top of the fireworks hangover, the city of 20-million people is threatened by the burning of wheat and rice stubble in neighbouri­ng farmlands, along with traffic fumes, factory emissions and smoke from fires used in poor neighbourh­oods for heating and cooking.

Pollutants from this toxic cocktail become trapped over Delhi by cooler winter temperatur­es and the usually slowmoving winds that prevail at this time of year.

NEW LAWS

Authoritie­s in Delhi have ordered schools to remain shut and have also banned constructi­on work across the city until at least Tuesday.

Diesel-spewing trucks that rumble into Delhi each night have been stopped, except those carrying essential commoditie­s.

A new law came into effect on Sunday restrictin­g cars from the capital’s roads to alternativ­e days, depending on if their number plate ends in an odd or even number.

Hundreds of police tried to enforce the car rationing order but many owners ignored the restrictio­ns despite the threat of a $55 (R811) fine.

The local government has started handing out millions of pollution masks, while calling on the city’s residents to restrict outdoor activities.

‘LIVES AT STAKE’

The Indian capital is one of 14 Indian cities listed in the WHO’s top 15 most-polluted cities across the world.

New Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal says “lives are at stake” in the mega-city’s pollution crisis.

But residents complain that no-one is taking the emergency seriously, and experts say neither the national nor city government are taking the required long-term action to control the deadly smog.

With a state election due in Delhi in early 2020, the crisis has also become a casualty of political bickering, with each side blaming the other.

“I can’t even imagine what it must be like to live here under these conditions,” Indian actress Priyanka Chopra, in town to shoot a movie, said in an Instagram post.

POLLUTANTS FROM THIS TOXIC COCKTAIL BECOME TRAPPED OVER DELHI BY COOLER WINTER TEMPERATUR­ES

 ?? /AFP ?? Hazy view: Authoritie­s in Delhi have closed schools, issued warnings and enacted new laws as the city struggles with a dangerous toxic smog.
/AFP Hazy view: Authoritie­s in Delhi have closed schools, issued warnings and enacted new laws as the city struggles with a dangerous toxic smog.

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