Delhi hit by rare summer air pollution alert
Most winters, the city is blanketed in a toxic smog of car fumes, agricultural smoke, and factory waste.
A cow lies on a pile of garbage and dry leaves in a city park in New Delhi on May 10, 2019. (Photo by Laurène Becquart / AFP)
New Delhi suffered a rare summer air pollution alert Monday as dust storms and heat over northern India took smog to hazardous levels.
The world’s most polluted capital city is blanketed in a toxic smog of car fumes, agricultural smoke and factory waste most winters, but it is less severe in summer months.
On Monday, the Indian government’s air quality index hit “very poor” with PM 2.5 particles, the most harmful, at 154 micrograms per cubic metre, five times the normal safe level.
Clouds of dust swirled around the streets and many people brought out masks generally used in winter.
VK Soni, an India Meteorological Department official, told AFP: “Right now we are in the thunderstorm season. High-speed winds are raising a lot of dust but we think it is only transient and will change in a day or two, when it rains.”
Pollution levels started rising the day after a top minister promised that Delhi’s air would be clean in three years because of action taken by the government.
Transport and Water Resources Minister Nitin Gadkari told an election-campaign press conference last Thursday: “Our government has done 100% corruption-free, transparent, time-bound, result-oriented and quality work and that is why Delhi will be free of air and water pollution in the next three years.”
Indian authorities have unsuccessfully tried to curb pollution in recent years.
Indian cities made up 14 of the world’s 15 most polluted cities in a UN survey released in 2018. Air pollution contributes to hundreds of thousands of premature deaths each year in India, according to the United Nations.
The Delhi region has been described as a “gas chamber” by the state’s incumbent chief minister, Arvind Kejriwal.
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