Kejriwal Has a New Winter Pollution Plan for Delhi. It Should Focus More on Cutting Emissions.

The Delhi government has started to prepare in advance this year, raising hopes that if it gets enforcement right, the air this winter may just be more breathable.

First, the good news: In addition to announcing a ban on the storage, distribution, sale and bursting of firecrackers, the Delhi government has drafted a 10-point winter action plan to combat air pollution, based on data from the last five years to predict ‘hotspots’ two weeks in advance.

The draft plan is currently being circulated among air pollution experts and clean air advocates for feedback.

This is good news because the government has finally begun planning ahead of the annual winter pollution spike and because it will finally enlist predictive models and historical data and attempt to be more proactive, instead of reactive.

This has been the biggest complaint against the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP). It was an emergency measure that banked on short-term control measures even as air pollution went off the charts.

Now for the bad news. The Delhi government’s environment department still depends on models like the GRAP, the same tired and inefficient civic agencies, and the under-staffed Central Pollution Control Board to help enforce existing pollution-control laws.

On September 14, the Delhi government conducted a review meeting with agencies that help run the city, including the Development Authority, Jal Board and the Public Works Department. The government is expected to unveil its final plan on September 30.

In this context, one saving grace is that the government intends to reach out to the newly minted Commission on Air Quality Management (CAQM). The CAQM has the ability to coordinate as well as catalyse bureaucratic decisions. It is itself headed by a bureaucrat – M.M. Kutty – who, as former chief secretary, is familiar with working with the aforementioned, and other, agencies.

Also read: Between Pollution and Lockdowns, Kashmir’s Beloved Houseboats Are Sinking into History

Delhi environment minister Gopal Rai has already said that he will call upon the CAQM this week to discuss stubble-burning. He also said he would talk about the Pusa bio-decomposer – a microbial solution to ferment stubble into manure. If the CAQM is able to avert the smoke from burning stubble in north India’s farmlands, it will more than justify its own existence, and also increase the health outcomes of nearly half a billion people that live on the Indo-Gangetic Plain. Recent data from the Energy Policy Institute, of the University of Chicago, suggested around 40% of Indians lose nine years of their lives by breathing North India’s foul air.

In case the Punjab and Haryana governments are reluctant to adopt the use of Pusa decomposer – since it has become associated with their political rival – clean air advocates have said they could adopt other similar solutions.

At the same time, as the farmers’ protests against the three infamous farm laws have intensified, no one expects those farmers who do burn paddy stubble will be fined heavily, more so since state elections in Punjab are around the corner. So the CAQM needs to quickly preempt stubble-burning with other (preferably inexpensive) solutions. Otherwise, North India will suffer more than it has in previous years.

Going by Gopal Rai’s statements, the stage already seems to be set. “There will be no need to register cases against farmers,” he said on September 10. “In Delhi, we took it upon ourselves to spray Pusa bio-decomposer in every non-basmati rice field. There will be no need to invoke provisions of law against farmers if the governments give them a solution.”

This is likely also why the Delhi government reiterated the ban on firecrackers on September 14. Smoke from burning stubble and firecrackers are the two largest sources of winter pollution peaks. And with less wiggle room vis-à-vis the stubble, the government has to turn the screw on fireworks.

The airshed level

To the Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP’s) credit, it has been among the first political parties to publicly acknowledge the life-threatening effects of air pollution plaguing Delhi. It has also highlighted that pollution is a North India problem, not just a Delhi problem, and thus requires governments to work together. “Experts have ruled that this an airshed issue,” as Rai told reporters last week.

Rai then spelt out his government’s points of focus this winter:

  • Stubble and garbage burning
  • Vehicular and dust pollution
  • Identifying and tackling hotspots
  • Studying smog towers
  • Communicating with neighbouring states
  • Upgrading the pollution ‘war room’ and updating the ‘Green Delhi App’
  • Coordinating with the Centre and the CAQM

On the last count, the government is to set up a team of officers to talk to neighbouring states about fighting pollution together, Rai said. “Any activity against the environment in Haryana, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh affects Delhi, too,” in his words. This is another reason why involving the CAQM, and its centralised authority, will be crucial. No single state can independently solve the air pollution problem.

While the Delhi government’s winter action plan is a start, and the runway has been extended by being proactive, reducing exposure – versus reducing emissions – is a treacherous path. For example “studying smog towers”, one of the items on the government’s to-do list, means little. Smog towers do nothing to reduce emissions at the source, and are inefficient at human exposure to pollutants. As such, they are a waste of public money.

Several experts and activists have repeatedly slammed the 2019 Supreme Court order to install smog towers. Care for Air, the organisation I cofounded, penned a letter to the court and later filed a petition arguing against smog towers with scientific evidence, but the court dismissed it. Lawyer Veera Mauli wrote subsequently: “When judges decide to act as scientists, they can still demand compliance, but it spells disaster.”

But both the Aam Aadmi Party and the Bharatiya Janata Party have been quick to claim credit for even newly installed towers.

Similarly, upgrading a ‘war room’ and a ‘green app’ will only be as useful as their ability to address and resolve the people’s pollution complaints quickly and efficiently. The Delhi government has moved complaints about burning biomass to the app, with the relevant department promising a two-hour turnaround.

Also read: India’s Air Pollution Mitigation Strategy Needs More Direction

The government plan also has a “citizen engagement activities” part. It includes requesting citizens to reduce one trip per week, stop idling at red lights, prevent burning and to report fires they see. The city also hopes to involve neighbourhood watch groups, resident welfare associations, etc. through webinars and other nudges.

Unlike the erstwhile odd-even road-sharing scheme, which was mandatory, these activities are voluntary. (Rai has said the odd-even scheme will be used as a last resort.)

Using historical data and building on existing knowledge is a big improvement on last year’s “war on pollution”. But for this to be more than just rhetoric, the government needs to do more to reduce or capture emissions at the source.

Experts have also pointed out a challenge with using historical data to estimate pollution levels two weeks in advance. It’s that even a small meteorological change could precipitate sharp differences in estimated and actual pollution. Sudden winds or rain could easily skew data, blowing or washing away particulate matter – as could reduced industrial activity, as during the COVID-19 lockdowns.

EV and solar microgrids

Perhaps most importantly, until the Delhi government focuses on reducing emissions at source, its ‘war’ on pollution will be lost in advance.

The AAP has tried to have thermal power plants in neighbouring areas cut their emissions. It petitioned the Supreme Court to ask the Centre to not allow thermal power plants to continue operations without installing specific filters in their chimneys. But the court dismissed the petition in July. This means another big source of Delhi’s bad air will continue to remain unaddressed.

Thermal power plants have been lobbying the government since late 2017 to delay having to add these filters to their chimneys. Installing them will increase costs and thus reduce the plants’ profitability. But with the just-announced ban on firecrackers, at least one unproductive source of emissions is likely to be reduced – assuming the Delhi government can enforce it well.

Indeed, one area where the government can actually make a difference without the courts’ or the Centre’s help is in public transport. Until August 2021, Delhi had procured only 452 of the long-promised 1,000 additional buses. The total fleet strength is just under 6,800 – less than half of what experts have estimated the city needs. Improving public transport will lead to lesser congestion and, thus, lower vehicular emissions.

This said, the government has already made a difference in two areas. The first is its electric vehicles policy, notified last year. The other is the new solar microgrid in Malviya Nagar, which power minister Satyendra inaugurated last week. The pilot grid is expected to decongest the power network and stabilise the grid in times of high demand, by distributing the load efficiently and reducing dependence on coal. Jain said more such microgrids are likely to come up.

These are exactly the sort of longer-term policy measures that every city in India’s polluted plains needs, to clean the air its people breathe.

§

Stubble-burning has been pushed back this year thanks to incessant rains over North India. Delhi has received an unusual 383.4 mm of rainfall in September so far – the highest for the month in 77 years, according to India Meteorological Department data.

In addition to delaying the inevitable, the rains have also washed away a lot of the particulate matter that is most harmful to human lungs. The government’s SAFAR app, which tracks air quality, has stayed in the “good” to “satisfactory” range through most of August and September.

But those of us who follow the air-pollution narrative closely know this is just temporary respite. Data on NASA Worldview has started to show some fires in West Bengal, Jharkhand and Odisha, and across the border in Pakistan. After stubble-burning kicked off the high-pollution season, Diwali firecrackers were expected to add another layer of toxicity to our already foul air. But we now have reason to hope that if the Delhi government delivers on its promise, this winter could be somewhat better.

Note: This article was edited at 1:35 pm on September 16, 2021, to note that the author is cofounder, and no longer president of Care for Air.

Jyoti Pande Lavakare is an independent journalist, co-founder of the Care for Air non-profit and the author of Breathing Here is Injurious to Your Health: The Human Cost of Air Pollution, published by Hachette in November 2020.

‘Cracker Compromise?’ Kejriwal Govt to Conduct Live Lakshmi Puja at Delhi Temple

While some believe that it is a step forward in his soft Hindutva approach, for others it is a step he has had to take in order to avoid being labelled as ‘anti-Hindu’ for enforcing the ban on firecrackers.

New Delhi: The Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal will perform Lakshmi Puja along with his Cabinet colleagues at Akshardham Temple on Diwali evening. The event will be telecast live. In a tweet, Kejriwal mentioned that this would be a way to encourage everyone to participate in Diwali.

The move is a significant one. While some believe that it is a step forward in his soft Hindutva approach, for others it is a step he has had to take in order to avoid being labelled as ‘anti-Hindu’ for enforcing the ban on firecrackers.

On the face of it, the government’s effort intends to discourage people from coming out of their houses and bursting crackers, worsening a health crisis and increasing already high air pollution levels. Last year, the Delhi government had organised a laser lights display at Connaught Place around Diwali to discourage the bursting of crackers.

The Supreme Court has also banned crackers and fireworks in Delhi this week, as have the National Green Tribunal, in all districts under the National Capital Region, and all cities across the country with “poor” or worse air from November 9 to November 30.

Also read: NGT Bans Sale, Use of Firecrackers in Delhi-NCR from Tonight Till End November

A double announcement

The decision on the Lakshmi puja was announced by Delhi health minister Satyendar Jain on November 6. At the same instance, Jain announced the ban on crackers from November 7 to November 30 “in view of the air pollution”. He had also connected the issue to the pandemic saying, “This time around, there is pollution and COVID-19.

The minister had reasoned that “when firecrackers are burst on Diwali, people are unable to breathe properly for around 3-4 hours late at night due to air pollution. There is a pandemic across the country. People have not seen such a thing in their entire lifetime. People should understand and refrain from bursting crackers. Everyone should conduct poojas and offer prayers at their homes. The Lakshmi Puja by Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal will be broadcast live. Everyone can join him in their homes.”

Kejriwal also published a video message urging everyone to pray with him at the time of the puja.

“Diwali is on the 14th. Lord Ram returned after his 14-year exile on Diwali. Let the two crore people of Delhi pray together this year. The auspicious time for the puja is on the 14th, at 7.39 pm. I will be at Akshardham Temple with my ministers at 7.39 pm. The puja and chants will be streamed live on TV channels. Please pray with me at the same time. When 2 crore people of Delhi will pray together, wonderful vibrations will emanate. Visible and invisible powers will bless the people of Delhi,” the message said.

In the past, the Delhi government has promoted religious activities like the Haj pilgrimage, iftaar, Phool walon ki sair, the Kanwar Yatra and Chhath Puja. It also organises groups of the elderly who are sent on pilgrimages together.

However, no other chief minister of Delhi has performed a set of religious rituals as part of a government initiative.

Also read: AAP: Soft Hindutva or a Bulwark Without Illusions?

Unlike the BJP governments in states like Uttar Pradesh or Madhya Pradesh, which perform numerous pujas, the Aam Aadmi Party government in Delhi has a sizeable support base in other communities.

In the past year, AAP has found reason to distance itself from Muslims and stick to its soft Hindutva stance. The protests at Shaheen Bagh, against the Citizenship Amendment Act, found AAP in a spot. The party’s Okhla MLA Amanatullah Khan’s support notwithstanding, Kejriwal had openly decried the protest. When it came to the violence in northeast Delhi, AAP dropped its councillor Tahir Hussain as soon as his name was brought up in connection with the murder of an Intelligence Bureau staffer. AAP did not change its stance, even when questions were asked of the extent of Hussain’s involvement.

But that did not help either. It soon found itself being accused of being anti-Muslim for not taking up the cause of numerous community youth who were arrested in riot cases. Former Delhi Minorities Commission chairperson Zafarul Islam Khan accused AAP of not presenting the panel’s fact-finding report on the Delhi riots before the assembly.

Several other fact-finding groups also accused the AAP government of not doing enough by means of compensation or welfare activities for the riot victims. All this while, the BJP has kept portraying AAP as anti-Hindu by accusing it of seeking to appoint advocates for riots cases whom the Delhi police did not want.

SC Modifies Telangana HC Cracker Ban; Allows Sale, Use of ‘Green’ Varieties

Meanwhile, following the Telangana HC’s directions, the state government had on Friday issued an order imposing a ban on sale and use of firecrackers with immediate effect.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Friday allowed the sale and use of green crackers in Telangana for two hours, modifying the high court’s order on Thursday, which imposed a ban on sale and use of firecrackers in the state.

The two-judge bench of Justices A.M. Khanwilkar and Sajiv Khanna was hearing a plea by the Telangana Fire Workers Dealers Association, which had challenged the high court order on grounds that the decision will impact their livelihoods.

The petitioner had argued that the order was submitted without providing the Association an opportunity to represent itself. It had contended that selling of firecrackers is a “seasonal business for which heavy investments have been made,” said reports.

The apex court’s direction is in accordance with the November 9 order of the National Green Tribunal (NGT), which had permitted bursting of green crackers in cities where air quality is “moderate”, LiveLaw has reported.

Meanwhile, following the Telangana high court’s directions, the Telangana government had on Friday issued an order imposing a ban on sale and use of firecrackers with immediate effect.

In addition to banning sale and use of fireworks by people and organisations on Thursday, the Telangana high court had directed the state government to immediately clamp down and close shops which were selling fireworks.

A government order (GO), dated November 12, said the high court has further issued directions to appeal to people, both through print and the electronic media, to refrain from bursting firecrackers, to prevent any further deterioration in air quality.

The government order had asked the state DGP, DG of fire services and all-district collectors, commissioners of police, superintendents of police in the state to take immediate action to close the shops which are selling fireworks throughout the state.

Besides Delhi, West Bengal, Maharashtra, Odisha, Rajasthan, Sikkim, and Karnataka have also banned firecrackers.

(With inputs from PTI)

NGT Bans Sale, Use of Firecrackers in Delhi-NCR from Tonight Till End November

In addition, in cities and towns where the air quality has been ‘moderate’ in November, only green crackers are permitted for a two-hour window during festivals.

New Delhi: The National Green Tribunal (NGT) on Monday imposed a total ban on the sale or use of all kinds of firecrackers in the National Capital Region (NCR) from the midnight of November 9 to the midnight of November 30.

A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel clarified that the direction will apply to all cities and towns in the country where the average of ambient air quality during November (as per available data of last year) fell under the ‘poor’ and above categories.

“The cities/towns where air quality is ‘moderate’ or below, only green crackers be sold, and the timings for use and bursting of crackers be restricted to two hours during festivals like Diwali, Chhath, New Year/Christmas Eve etc., as may be specified by the state concerned. At other places, ban/restrictions are optional for the authorities but if there are more stringent measures under orders of the authorities, the same will prevail,” the bench said.

The NGT also directed all states and Union Territories to initiate special drives to contain air pollution from all sources in view of the potential of aggravation of COVID-19.

On November 6, the Delhi government had decided to ban firecrackers in the national capital till November 30, 2020, and ramp up medical infrastructure in hospitals. The ban also covers green crackers. “In the wake of the rising pollution and coronavirus cases in Delhi due to the festival season, the Delhi government has decided to put a complete ban on the sale, purchase, and use of firecrackers in the city from November 7 to November 30,” the Delhi government said in a statement.

COVID-19 cases have been spiking in the national capital in recent days, with a record daily high of 7,745 new cases reported on Monday morning. The worsening air pollution in the city has lead to serious concern, since COVID-19 affects the respiratory system.

(With PTI inputs)

Karnataka Will Ban the Use of Firecrackers During Deepavali Says CM Yediyurappa

Several states including Rajasthan, Odisha, Delhi have already decided to ban firecrackers.

Bengaluru: Karnataka chief minister B.S. Yediyurappa on Friday said the state government will be issuing an order banning the use of firecrackers during Deepavali, due to the prevailing COVID-19 pandemic situation.

“We have discussed it (cracker ban), we are deciding to ban the use of firecrackers during Deepavali. The government will soon be issuing an order to this effect,” Yediyurappa said.

Speaking to reporters here, he said due to COVID-19 and related reasons use of firecrackers are being banned this time.

Several states including Rajasthan, Odisha, Delhi have already decided to ban firecrackers.

State health minister K. Sudhakar on Thursday said firecrackers can badly impact the health of those who have already been infected by a coronavirus.

He also said experts have advised controlling their use, and a final decision will be taken after consultation with the chief minister.

Delhi Government Bans Firecrackers Ahead of Diwali

Delhi has recorded a spike in COVID-19 cases in the past few days with the number of daily infections crossing the 6,000-mark for the second consecutive day on Wednesday.

New Delhi: Ahead of Diwali, the Delhi government on Thursday decided to ban firecrackers in the national capital till November 30, 2020, and ramp up medical infrastructure in hospitals, with Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal holding the festive season and pollution responsible for the rising COVID-19 cases in the city.

The ban will also cover green crackers, said a government official.

“In the wake of the rising pollution and coronavirus cases in Delhi due to the festival season, the Delhi government has decided to put a complete ban on the sale, purchase, and use of firecrackers in the city from November 7 to November 30,” the government said in a statement.

In a tweet, Kejriwal said, “Reviewed corona situation in Delhi and preparedness with Chief Secy, Health officials and all DMs. Corona cases have increased due to festival season and pollution. It was decided to:

1. Ban crackers in Delhi,

2. Ramp up medical infra, Oxygen and

3. ICU beds are being increased in Delhi govt hospitals”.

4. Targetted testing

5. All steps shud be taken to ensure that the fatality rate does not increase

Delhi BJP president Adesh Gupta criticised the move saying it was a “temporary” step necessitated by “failure” of the Kejriwal government to work on promises like strengthening public transport, buying electric buses and solving the problem of dust on roads.

President of Delhi Congress Anil Chaudhary welcomed the ban but said it was a delayed step that will hurt small traders and demanded financial help to compensate for their losses.

The chief minister earlier in the day said the COVID-19 situation was deteriorating in Delhi due to the rising air pollution and appealed to people not to burst firecrackers, and join him and his ministers instead in a ‘Laxmi Pujan’ programme to be organised by the AAP government this Diwali.

COVID-19 cases have increased in Delhi due to the ongoing festival season and pollution, the chief minister said after the review meeting with the chief secretary, health department officials and district magistrates (DMs).

Delhi has recorded a spike in COVID-19 cases in the past few days with the number of daily infections crossing the 6,000-mark for the second consecutive day on Wednesday.

According to a senior Delhi Police officer, 138 licences for firecracker shops were issued this year.

A total of 260 applications for firecracker shop licences were received. Out of them, 138 licences were issued to those who met all the requirements as prescribed by the Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation, said Joint Commissioner of Police (Licensing Unit), Suvashis Choudhary.

Who Killed the Elephant in Kerala?

It makes little sense to outrage at the death of an elephant while we keep stealing animals’ homes and resources.

Representative image of an elephant. Photo: Renato Conti.

The social network has been aflutter with outrage and anger over the demise of an elephant in Kerala. These platforms are full of gruesome cartoons and caricatures of the ‘pregnant’ elephant that was ‘brutally murdered’ on May 27, 2020, after allegedly being offered a pineapple stuffed with firecrackers by an errant person. TV news channels and some newspapers across India since followed up with sensational news items of their own. Skimming through all these posts and presentations prompts a few questions about what we’re being told happened, and what really happened.

Notable here is the fact that BJP MP Maneka Gandhi lashed out on her Twitter account against Malappuram, marking it out for its “intense criminal activity”.

Malappuram district is located in Kerala’s north. It consists of 138 villages under seven taluks. It has a population of 4.1 million, of which 70.24% are Muslims (Census 2011). What could a Union minister have meant when she said an entire district is “active”, criminally speaking? Islamophobia has been on the rise in India for quite some time now, more recently being targeted against Muslim people after allegations that the Tablighi Jamat congregation in New Delhi had been singularly responsible for coronavirus case-load spikes around the country. Calling an entire Muslim-majority district “criminally active” only worsens the Islamophobia.

More importantly, let’s examine the other facts of this story. It began with a Facebook post by Mohan Krishnan, a forest officer who narrated the death of the elephant near the Velliyar River. His narrative raises a few concerns, especially the obviously fictionalised bits, such as – in his words – the elephant having a “sixth sense” that she was going to die. People are emotional, but the emotions here seemed to lend credibility to other attempts to sensationalise the event.

Surendrakumar, the principal chief conservator of forests and the chief wildlife warden, told PTI that it was ‘certain’ the elephant had been offered a pineapple embedded with explosives by a man, and she died when they exploded in her mouth.

Physical geography is important here, as the minister may like to know as well. The elephant had wandered off from Silent Valley National Park in the Mannarkkad region of Palakkad district. Palakkad and Malappuram districts share a long border, dotted with villages all along. The elephant was found near the Thiruvizhiamkunnu forest station, which falls under Mannarkkad forest division. This is geographically located in Palakkad district.

So Maneka Gandhi is wrong: the elephant died in Palakkad, not Malappuram. Why misguide the public and promote Islamophobia?

Also read: As Captive Elephants Starve, Lockdown Brings a Problem Practice to the Fore

Second, according to The Hindu, Mannarkkad divisional forest officer K.K. Sunil Kumar said that prima facie there was no evidence this act was intentional. Forest officers also told the newspaper that there was no proof of the elephant having consumed an explosive-filled pineapple.

It’s common and longstanding practice among farmers living on the fringes of forests to embed pineapples with explosives to scare away wild boars that destroy their farms. In fact, the Government of Kerala passed an order in March this year allowing forest officials to gun down wild boars that were damaging the crops, after declaring the animals ‘vermin’. This was in accordance with the law: Section 62 of the Wildlife Protection Act 1972 empowers states to send a list of wild animals to the Centre requesting it to declare them ‘vermin’ for selective slaughter. This list, apart from wild boars, includes rhesus macaques and nilgai. And on May 15, forest officers gunned down a female wild boar in Pathanamthitta district. Many people celebrated this act.

What happened with the elephant is definitely heartbreaking but what followed is more worrying. The elephant was one month pregnant. There was no way this could have been noticed. Instead, a tragic coincidence – but a coincidence nonetheless – has allowed various people to grind their own axes. The people who are responsible for transforming this incident into a disaster of sorts are public servants at various levels: the forest officer who presumed whoever he thought was involved to be “selfish” and merciless; journalists who failed to perform the basic checks; the general public who amplified these claims as the next sensation; politicians who used this incident as a propaganda tool; and so forth.

It is important, at the end of it all, to ask: To whom do our forests belong? The elephant should not have died – but are we, who have condoned the destruction of forests and have appropriated the commons in the name of development, not the ones who are ultimately responsible for this death? Humans occupied more land as cities kept growing, eventually eating into forests in search of space to occupy as well as grow food in. And as we used up more of the local resources, including water, the forests ran dry and forced animals into new areas and new habits.

Just as it makes little sense to install smog towers while we keep polluting the air, it makes little sense to outrage at the death of an elephant while we keep stealing animals’ homes and resources.

Also read: The Ugly Side of Wildlife Tourism

Finally, it is inhuman to attack any animal – whether wild boars or elephants. For example, the areas surrounding the Attapadi forests near the villages of Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu – of which the Silent Valley National Reserve is only an extension – have many buildings, including farm houses, with electric fences to deal with elephants. One of these buildings belongs to a public institution and another to a spiritual organisation. The fundamental issue is the insensitivity of the people who barge into forests, leaving the animals there homeless.

Why do we care so much when an elephant is killed by coincidence and not when wild boars are killed intentionally by the same practice? Why do responsible people who hold public offices act irresponsibly? Let us take a minute to condemn what has happened – but let also take more than a minute to contemplate, discuss and debate what is happening in general.

Vaidyanath Nishant is a lecturer and researcher at the Loyola Academy, Hyderabad.

Note: In an earlier version of this article, Maneka Gandhi was referred to as a minister. While she was a minister in Narendra Modi’s first government (2014-2019), she is currently only a member of parliament.

Delhi: SC’s Limit on Crackers Defied, Air Quality Falls to ‘Severe’ After Diwali

The Centre’s air quality monitor said an increase in the wind speed will help disperse pollutants and the pollution levels are expected to come down by evening.

New Delhi: A layer of haze enveloped the national capital a day after Diwali as the city’s air quality on Monday plummeted to the “severe” category for the first time this season with a large number of revellers brazenly flouting the Supreme Court-enforced two-hour limit for bursting crackers.

Delhi’s apprehensions came true despite the top court’s order that only green firecrackers, which reportedly cause 30% less pollution, can be manufactured and sold, and the Arvind Kejriwal government organising a mega laser show in an effort to dissuade people from bursting crackers.

According to the Ministry of Earth Sciences’ air quality monitor, SAFAR, levels of PM2.5 tiny particulate matter of diameter 2.5 or less than 2.5 microns that can enter deep into the lungs reached as high as 735 at Delhi University.

Delhi’s overall air quality index (AQI) stood at 463 at 11:30 am, according to the System of Air Quality and Weather Forecasting and Research (SAFAR).

The AQI at Pusa, Lodhi Road, Airport Terminal T3, Noida, Mathura Road, Ayanagar, IIT Delhi, Dhirpur, and Chandni Chowk was 480, 436, 460, 668, 413, 477, 483, 553 and 466, respectively.

However, according to Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) data, Delhi’s overall AQI stood at 348 at 11.30 am on Monday. It was 337 at 4 pm on Sunday.

SAFAR said an increase in the wind speed will help disperse pollutants and the pollution levels are expected to come down by evening.

Also Read: To Clean Its Air, There Are Miles to Go Before Delhi Can Sleep

It had earlier predicted that Delhi’s overall AQI would enter the severe category between 1 am and 6 am on Monday, primarily due to firecracker emissions, unfavourable weather and a significant spike in stubble burning.

An AQI between 0-50 is considered “good”, 51-100 “satisfactory”, 101-200 “moderate”, 201-300 “poor”, 301-400 “very poor”, and 401-500 “severe”. Above 500 is “severe-plus emergency” category.

The satellite towns of Ghaziabad (378), Greater Noida (364), Gurgaon (359) and Noida (375) recorded their AQI in the very poor category, according to CPCB data.

Ambala, Hisar and Kurulshetra in Haryana recorded their AQI at 370, 380, and 377, respectively. In Uttar Pradesh’ Muzaffarnagar, Moradbabad, Meerut, it was 414, 393 and 330.

The AQI in Punjab’s Patiala, Ludhiana, Jalandhar and Khanna stood at 334, 314, 321 and 301, respectively.

Last night, people reported violation of the Supreme Court-enforced two-hour window in Malviya Nagar, Lajpat Nagar, Kailash Hills, Burari, Jangpura, Shahdara, Laxmi Nagar, Mayur Vihar, Sarita Vihar, Hari Nagar, New Friends Colony, Hauz Khas, Gautam Nagar, Dwarka among others places.

Residents in Noida, Greater Noida, Gurgaon, Ghaziabad and Faridabad also reported extensive fireworks much beyond the timeframe.

People could also be seen bursting crackers before 8 pm, however, the intensity remained low.

After last year’s Diwali, Delhi’s AQI had crossed the 600-mark, which is 12 times the safe limit. The AQI post-Diwali was 367 in 2017 and 425 in 2016.

With Delhi’s air quality plummeting to dangerous levels around Diwali every year, the Supreme Court in 2018 banned polluting firecrackers and ordered that only green firecrackers, which is said to cause 30 per cent less pollution, can be manufactured and sold.

But the green pyrotechnics have failed to draw good response both from sellers and buyers, primarily due to lack of variety, limited stock and high prices.

The Delhi government had organised a four-day laser show from October 26 to encourage people not to burst crackers this Diwali and Chief Minister Kejriwal had said the move aims at encouraging a “community and pollution-free Diwali”.

Last year also, people continued to buy the conventional firecrackers and use them.

Reality Check: Smoke From Firecracker Snake = 464 Cigarettes

A laad (string of crackers), burnt for 48 seconds, produced high PM 2.5 levels of 38,540 µg/m³, equivalent to particulate matter emitted by 277 cigarettes.

Note: This article was first published on October 20, 2017 and is being republished on October 27, 2019 on the occasion Diwali.

Would you be comfortable sending your child into a room filled with smoke from 464 cigarettes? That is equivalent to the amount of particulate matter less than 2.5 microns (PM 2.5) emitted by the popular firecracker called a snake tablet.

Six popular firecrackers – the snake tablet, the laad (string of 1,000 crackers), fuljhadi (sparkler), the pul-pul (string sparkler), anar (flower-pot), chakri (spinning firecracker) – emit particulate matter 200 to 2,000 times the safe limits as designated by the World Health Organization (WHO), according to a 2016 study by the Chest Research Foundation, Pune, and students from the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences of the University of Pune.

The study used a light-scattering photometer, which counts the number of particles and converts them into mass, then expressed as µg/m³. The photometer recorded minute-by-minute levels of PM 2.5 over the duration of the study. The firecrackers tested were kept at distances normally kept by those who light them: For instance, the fuljhadi was kept at a distance of 1 ft, while the laad and anar were kept at a distance of 6 ft.

The study found the snake tablet produced the highest amount of PM 2.5, followed by the laad, pul-pul, fuljhadi, chakri and anar.

 

Credit: Study by the Chest Research Foundation, Pune, and students from the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences of the University of Pune

Credit: Study by the Chest Research Foundation, Pune, and students from the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences of the University of Pune

IndiaSpend analysed the study results and compared them to the PM 2.5 emitted by a single cigarette in a closed room of 50 m³, as a 2014 study published in medical journal Tumori did, to get the equivalent of cigarettes inhaled.

Credit: IndiaSpend calculations based on study published in Tumori, 2014

Credit: IndiaSpend calculations based on study published in Tumori, 2014
Mean PM 2.5 emitted by a typical cigarette in a room of 50 m³ is around 139 µg/m³.

Although the snake tablet burnt for only nine seconds, it produced the highest peak of PM 2.5 (64,500 mcg/m3) – the equivalent of smoke from 464 cigarettes – while the laadwhich burnt for 48 seconds, produced high PM 2.5 levels of 38,540 µg/m³, equivalent to particulate matter emitted by 277 cigarettes.

The snake, laad and pul-pul were the top three PM 2.5 producers, while the anar produced the lowest amount of PM 2.5. The anar perhaps produced the lowest levels because the smoke was measured at a height of three ft and a distance of six ft or it had better combustion, the researchers inferred.

In general, particulate matter is considered dangerous to humans since it can reach the deepest portions of the lung. It is declared as a class 1 carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer and is also linked to heart disease and respiratory ailments.

PM 2.5, 30 times finer than a human hair, is even more dangerous due to its tiny size and ability to accumulate in human organs and blood.

India has set a 24-hour mean standard of 60 µg/m³ for PM 2.5, while the WHO has a lower standard of 25 µg/m³.

Firecrackers not only release particulate matter but also other harmful gases, such as nitrogen dioxide and sulphur dioxide. Credit: Reuters

Firecrackers not only release particulate matter but also other harmful gases, such as nitrogen dioxide and sulphur dioxide. Credit: Reuters

Children with weak immune and respiratory responses are particularly vulnerable. “Children, in particular, burn the fuljhhadi, the pul-pul and the snake tablet barely a foot or two away from them, and in doing so, (they) inhale a large number of smoke particles that reach deep into their lung,” Sneha Limaye, senior scientist at the Chest Research Foundation, told IndiaSpend.

The levels of PM 2.5 were measured only when an individual firecracker was burnt, but in real terms, many people burn many firecrackers together, which means the cumulative levels of PM 2.5 could reach “extremely high levels”, the researchers wrote.

Firecrackers not only release particulate matter but also other harmful gases, such as nitrogen dioxide and sulphur dioxide. A 2014 study found that air pollutants were two to six times higher during Diwali than on normal days.

“The extremely high levels of air pollutants generated during the burning of firecrackers causes worsening of asthma, allergic diseases of the eyes and nose, respiratory tract infections, pneumonias and heart attacks,” wrote Sundeep Salvi, director of the Chest Research Foundation.

Swagata Yadavar is principal correspondent with IndiaSpend.

A Day to Go for Diwali, Availability of Green Crackers Still Limited in Delhi

Given the shortage of green crackers, a market for traditional fire crackers continues to exist.

New Delhi: Only a few varieties of green crackers are available in Delhi markets thus far, according to a report in India Today. In 2018, the Supreme Court had banned the use of polluting firecrackers and allowed the sale of low-pollution crackers in a bid to control air pollution, particularly in north India.

The CSIR-National Environmental Engineering Research Institute was tasked with the job of developing ‘green crackers’. But the process has been slow and most varieties of crackers are yet to clear all licensing requirements, according to the Times of India.

This year only flowerpots, catherine wheels and sparklers will be licensed, ready and available in the markets, according to a report in the English daily. The sky-illuminating varieties of crackers are not yet available.

The new ‘green crackers’ are not as polluting as conventional crackers and contain atleast 30% less particulate matter such as sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxide. They also replace barium nitrate – a heavy pollutant and a key component of traditional crackers – with potassium nitrate in a bid to reduce the levels of pollution.

A quick response (QR) code on the packaging of crackers will help consumers identify green crackers, according to Harsh Vardhan, Union minister for science and technology. Scanning the code will show the composition of the fire cracker in question. The packaging will also come with a green logo and a certificate number.

Also read: In Imposing a Partial Ban on Crackers, SC Has Put Right to Life Over Religious Freedom

Curiously, however, there is no effort to curb the noise pollution caused by crackers. On the other hand, NEERI has listed ‘matching performance in sound with commercial crackers’ as one of the features of the ‘green crackers’.

In addition to air pollution, noise pollution too is a major problem in our cities. A worldwide hearing index ranked Delhi as the second noisiest city in the world in 2017.

Noise pollution can have adverse health impacts and has been linked to anxiety, high blood pressure, depression, diabetes and heart disease. It has also been found to impact cognitive performance among children.

Given the shortage of green crackers, a market for traditional fire crackers continues to exist. Recently, 700 kg of banned fire crackers were seized from just one shop in Delhi. In Kolkata, 400 kg of polluting fire crackers were seized.

Air pollution in most of north India has already spiked, but is marginally better than this time last year aided by steady winds and delays in the harvest of wheat, which has led to a marginal decline in farm fires. But, as The Wire has reported, farm fires could peak in the last week of October and early November. This, coupled with the air pollution caused by firecrackers on Diwali, could push up pollution levels dramatically early next week.