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Delhi, 10 December 2025
Air Pollution Hazards
STRINGENT ACTION
VITAL
By Dhurjati Mukherjee
A 10-year assessment of air pollution across
major urban centres has found that none of the country’s top cities met safe
AQI levels at any point between 2015 and November 2025. The report, prepared by
Climate Trends, analysed long-term pollution patterns across 11 major cities.
The case with India is no different with its capital Delhi, as always,
remaining the most polluted city throughout the period of study with average
AQIA levels peaking above 250 in 2016 and hovering around 180 this year.
Cities such as Lucknow, Varanasi and
Ahmedabad, which recorded high average AQI values – often above 200 – in the
first half of the decade, showed some improvement in the second half. While
southern and western cities such as Mumbai, Chennai, Pune and Bengaluru recorded
relatively moderate AQIA levels, even they did not meet safe thresholds. A
recent government report found over 2 lakh cases of acute respiratory illness
in six major hospitals in Delhi though other metros such as Mumbai and Chennai
find similar increases during periods of high pollution. Experts stressed the
need for better planning and data-driven interventions to at least check the
problem.
Referring to stubble burning which has
gradually gone down in Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan and that this happens for
just a fortnight, the Supreme Court asked the Union and NCR governments to
detail the measures taken on other pollution sources such as vehicles,
industries, construction, dust and the tangible results through implementation
of effective steps in this regard. It was very critical of construction
activities and wanted quality public transport to reduce air pollution.
It is worth noting here the report of the
Centre for Research on Energy & Clean Air which has rightly pointed out that,
the scale of the crisis far exceeds what is generally assumed. As per the
report, about 60 of India’s 749 districts breach the national annual PM2.5
standard of 40 micrograms per cubic metre that has been prescribed by the
National Ambient Air Quality Standards.
Not a single district meets the far stricter
guidelines of WHO, which recommends 5ug/m, about eight times more stringent
than India’s standards. In fact, air pollution is an annual threat. The norther
states such as Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh and the UT of
Chandigarh as well as the north-eastern state of Meghalaya maintained 100
percent district-level exceedance in all seasons except for monsoon.
The top 50 most polluted districts are mostly
concentrated in four northern and eastern states – Delhi, Haryana, Punjab,
Bihar and Assam. The perennial nature of poor air in the country has grave
consequences for public health and this has been revealed in various studies,
from time to time. Long-term exposure to PM 2.5 is associated with a range of
serious diseases including stroke, lung and heart ailments.
As per a study published in The Lancet Public
Health, long-term exposure to air pollution heightened mortality by 1.5 million
deaths per year in the country. Despite such alarming findings, public
attention and policy urgency remain disproportionately focused on metropolitan
India, chiefly the national capital. Along with cities, it is imperative that
Indian districts should have robust air-quality monitoring, local
emission-control plans, cleaner public transport, stricter regulation of
industrial and agricultural emissions, dust & waste management.
The disastrous effect of air pollution on
health was investigated by scientists at the University of South California
which found excess risks of death on the hottest days there are heat and
extreme levels of PM 2.6. Many places in India have this combination, observed
Soumya Swaminathan, the WHO’s chief scientist, while delivering the JC Bose
Memorial Lecture titled ‘Fragile Futures: The Climate Crisis & Its Toll on
Women and Children’.
“There
are three different aspects of health risk. One is the vulnerability factor. It
depends on where you live, the demography whether you are young or old, if a
woman is pregnant, if someone has a medical condition, people’s socio-economic
status, the gender and equity aspects and health system capacity. These are all
contributing to one’s vulnerability”, stated Swaminathan.Added to this is how
much a person gets exposed to these hazards and obviously the poorer sections,
specially those residing in slums, slummish-type settlements and besides
railway tracks are most affected.
According to the scientist, “the
cardiovascular system is the first to be impacted by heat. If you have a heart
condition, it can be harmful to your heart”. As such, we see heat exhaustion,
dehydration and heat stroke, all of which are most severe here, she pointed
out. Swaminathan also highlighted the impact of heat on mental health. People
have higher risks of anxiety and stress while those with schizophrenia or
depression can experience their conditions getting worse.
Some experts consider air pollution the
single largest threat to human life expectancy because of its scale, reach and
continuity. According to the Air Quality Life Index, it has been found that
long-term exposure to current pollution levels cuts almost three-and-a-half
years from an average Indian’s life. Though it is most visible during the
winter months, it is active all year round. People often notice air pollution
through irritation in their lungs or face breathing difficulties, but the most
serious damage happens silently over the long run with exposure increasing the
risk of heart disease, chronic lung disease, strokes, worsened childhood
asthma, reduced life-long lung infection etc.
China and the United States have been successful
in dramatically cleaning up their environment over time. Smaller nations and
younger democracies like The Gambia in Africa have made meaningful progress.
Other Asian countries like Japan, Thailand and Singapore have progressed as
well. Ultimately, it is for India to take positive steps in this regard as
clean air is a true national priority. Experts have suggested that India should
work towards a more unified system like US’s Air Now and the EU’s CAMS for
dedicated atmospheric monitoring with the help of air quality sensors, aviation
advisories and meteorological data integrated into a single geospatial
platform.
Whether the apex court’s stricture will help
the state governments in implementing the graded action plan (GRAP) in
scrupulously enforcing both short-term and long-term measures in tackling air
pollutionremains to be seen. However, it evident that in most metros and
big cities private transport rarely follows government guidelines and there is
virtually very little monitoring and enforcement of pollution norms. The state
governments do not want to take drastic action against these private operators
as otherwise the transport system may collapse.
Thus, air degradation has become manifest
throughout the year though it hits the headlines during the winter season. It
goes without saying that if public health has to be safeguarded, more stringent
action is called for. ---INFA
(Copyright, India
News & Feature Alliance)
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