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WHO Pollution Report - India

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May 03, 2018

What is the issue?

  • WHO report on most polluted cities highlights the worrying pollution scenario in Indian cities.
  • It makes it imperative to analyse the reasons for the Indo-gangetic plain being polluted the most.

What is the case with India?

  • 14 of the 15 cities with the highest levels of PM 2.5 pollutants in 2016 were in India.
  • These 14 towns and cities are mostly part of northern India stretching from west to east.
  • It covers from Jodhpur (No. 14) in Rajasthan to Gaya (No. 4), Patna (No. 5), and Muzaffarpur (No. 9) in Bihar.
  • The report identifies the Indo-Gangetic plain, along with Rajasthan and the Kashmir Valley, as having the worst air in the world.

What is the anomaly?

  • Delhi, Agra and Kanpur are evidently known to have very high levels of air pollution.
  • But places like Varanasi, Muzaffarpur, Gaya, and Srinagar do not have a high concentration of polluting industries.
  • They neither are notable for other common sources of pollution, such as vehicular emissions.
  • But a steady rise in the particulate matter all over the Gangetic plains is being noticed for the last one decade or so.

What make the Indo-Gangetic plain vulnerable?

  • Trapped - The Gangetic plains are like an enormous valley, trapped on both sides.
  • It lies between the Himalayas in the north and the Vindhyas in the south.
  • Resultantly, pollutants are unable to disperse very far.
  • Also, this region is land-locked and does not have the advantage of the coast.
  • So pollution cannot dissipate quickly as in, say, Mumbai or Chennai.
  • Populated - The region is one of the most densely populated in the world.
  • The demand for energy sources, and the consequent burning of fuels, is extremely high.
  • This naturally releases a large number of pollutants and particulate matter.
  • Waste management - A lot of the smaller cities have poor waste management.
  • There is a lot of burning, solid fuel use, moving from non-motorised to motorised transport, etc.
  • Secondary sources - Neither Gaya nor Muzaffarpur, not even Delhi and Kanpur, produce even half of the pollutants measured in these cities.
  • Most of the particles at Gaya and Muzaffarpur are actually transported from “up-wind” states.
  • It is shown that more than 60% of the particulate matter found in Kanpur has been generated elsewhere.
  • Humidity - As they move along, these particles gain in size and mass.
  • The high levels of humidity in this region is very conducive to the formation of secondary aerosols.
  • Water facilitates the reaction between the emitted gases whose molecules form clusters and slowly nucleate into particles.
  • Gases released from industries or vehicles, too, condense and are converted into particles.
  • Wind Direction - In this region, wind predominantly blows from north-west to east for most part of the year.
  • This is more so in the winter, carrying along with it pollutants generated elsewhere.
  • But once the pollutants enter the Gangetic region, they get trapped, and remain suspended over the area.

How to address this?

  • Air pollution does not recognise borders.
  • Improving air quality demands sustained and coordinated government action at all levels.
  • North India is not the only part of the world with these or similar geographical constraints.  
  • There are international models in such states/regions which have laws empowering governments to invoke stringent measures whenever required.
  • E.g. California, a valley with a propensity for pollution to build up, was the first state in the US to enact an anti-pollution law back in the 1940s.

 

Source: Indian Express

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