In May, the World Health Organisation said Delhi was the sixth-most polluted city in the country.
That
time of year when Delhi
makes the news for its severely polluted air is back with a
vengeance. On November 8, the day after Diwali, pollution in the city
reached the “severe-plus emergency” category because of the
widespread use of firecrackers. And while people in Delhi can testify
to just how bad it gets, what’s even more surprising is that there
are five other Indian cities that fare even worse when it comes to PM
2.5 levels.
PM
10 refers to particulate matter with a diameter below 10 μm; PM 2.5
refers to that with a diameter below 2.5 μm. PM 2.5 is generally
considered more harmful since its smaller size enables it to enter
the lungs and cause more damage than larger particles can.
According
to a report released by the World
Health Organisation in May this year,
Kanpur, Faridabad,
Varanasi, Gaya and Patna are even more polluted than Delhi. In the
list of the 15 most polluted cities in the world, 14 are in India.
Almost all of them lie in the northern states of Uttar Pradesh,
Rajasthan, Haryana and Bihar.
While
Kanpur ranked at one in the WHO’s list, a Reuters report pointed
out that the city has a hard time tracking air quality. “Every week
a lung cancer patient walks in; earlier we would get one in three
months,” Prem Singh, head of the department of medicine in Kanpur’s
Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi Memorial Medical College, told Reuters.
Varanasi,
which ranks third on the WHO’s list, did not see ‘good’ air for
even a single day in all of 2015.
In
Patna, pollution levels rose sharply on Tuesday. The same trends were
visible in Gaya and Muzaffarpur, with air quality in the ‘very
poor’ category. S.N. Jaiswal, a senior scientist at the Bihar State
Pollution Control Board, told Times of India, “Vehicular emission
and dust emanating from damaged roads and construction activities are
responsible for the high level of air pollution in Patna and some
other cities in Bihar.”
This
year, ignoring a Supreme Court order to burst only “green”
crackers between 8pm and 10 pm on Diwali, residents burst crackers in
several parts of the country at various times of day. In Delhi, which
saw a large amount of crackers, PM 2.5 levels reached 999.
Yet, post
Diwali, Kolkata was worse than Delhi in terms of PM 2.5 levels, with
reckless explosions in the city. Patna, Gaya and Muzaffarpur in Bihar
were also particularly affected.
While
pollution levels in Mumbai rose after Diwali, researchers said the
air in the city was cleaner than the same time in other years.
According
to Down to Earth magazine, air
quality has been deteriorating even before Diwali in all 70
cities for which the Central Pollution Control Board releases an AQI
bulletin. Between October 22 and 29, the report says, not one of
these cities breathed air in the ‘good’ category. So even while
media and public attention has been focused on Delhi and other
metropolitans, smaller cities maybe breathing even more harmful air.
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