Delhi air pollution updates: AAP says odd-even called off as women's safety cannot be compromised

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Delhi air pollution updates: AAP says odd-even called off as women's safety cannot be compromised
  • 17:09 (IST)

    Delhiites defy smog to participate in the annual pride parade

  • 17:02 (IST)

    Air pollution levels drops significantly in Gurugram 

    Gurugram, where pollution levels were around 460 in the Air Quality Index on Saturday, recorded a siginificant drop in pollution levels. As per the 3 pm update, the pollution level in Gurugram stood at 300 in the Air Quality Index. 

  • 16:56 (IST)

    Air pollution below hazardous levels in IHBAS 

  • 16:19 (IST)

    Punjabi Bagh's AQI remains in 'hazardous' category

    The AQI in Punjabi Bagh area, which was reportedly the worst hit in New Delhi because of the smog, is at 425 as of 4pm. The PM2.5 level is at 421.

  • 15:56 (IST)

    Congress MP Deepender Singh Hooda writes to PM Narendra Modi over pollution situation in North India

  • 15:34 (IST)

    Air quality level at Delhi's RK Puram improves, AQI index shows air pollution level reduced to 654 from previous 999

    Air quality in New Delhi's RK Puram showed slight improvement as the Air Quality Index recorded it at 654 at 3pm on Sunday. Just three hours ago, the index showed the level at 999.

  • 15:03 (IST)

    NGT orders AAP government to seize 10-year-old diesel and 15-year-old petrol vehicles

    It also directed the AAP government and the traffic police to challan and seize 10-year-old diesel vehicles and 15-year-old petrol vehicles to curb air pollution in the city.

    “The counsel appearing for NCT Delhi has informed that the site has already been provided for keeping the vehicles which are impounded/seized by the police being 10 years old vehicles in the case of diesel and 15 years old in the case of petrol.

    “We direct the Commissioner of Police, Delhi to ensure that vehicles which are violating the above directions of the tribunal should be seized and compliance report be submitted to the tribunal on the next date of hearing,” the bench said.

    PTI

  • 15:00 (IST)

    Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan backs demand for smog cutters in urban areas

  • 14:47 (IST)

    Swaraj India slams AAP government's measures to tackle pollution

    The Swaraj India party on Saturday hit out at Delhi's Aam Aadmi Party government's knee-jerk reactions to tackle the pollution menace instead of taking long term institutional measures.

    "I am not, in principle, opposed to odd-even scheme as and when it is required but Delhi's public transport is in shambles. Our national capital not even has 3,000 buses as against a requirement of 10,000. The government has not yet been able to make provisions for last mile connectivity even after making promises in its election manifesto. There has been no policy measure to promote non-motorised transport in the capital," said its Delhi unit chief Anupam.

    IANS

  • 14:41 (IST)

    Zomato founder Deepinder Goyal tweets

  • 14:36 (IST)

    Two-wheelers pollute more than cars

  • 14:29 (IST)

    Delhi air quality trend since July 2017

    Delhi air quality levels reached severe levels on two occasions. Between 20 and 22 October, the AQI reached nearly 750, while it rose to nearly 1000 between 7 and 10 November. 

    Courtesy: Nikhil Pahwa

  • 14:22 (IST)

    Smog a regular occurrence in Delhi 

    The environmental concern raised by hazardous air quality in Delhi has become an annual feature now. People indulge in the intense discussion at the turn of every winter, only to forget the smog worries when the air becomes slightly breathable. But desperate and revolutionary measures should be adopted to tackle the menace, said experts.

  • 14:18 (IST)

    Recurring smog problem discouraging professionals from coming to Delhi 

    The smog situation is also affecting the talent landscape of Delhi and NCR. Many professionals are being hesitant to take up career opportunities in and around Delhi and those who are working in Delhi are looking for career opportunities outside the state and opting for western or southern states of
    the country.

  • 14:12 (IST)

    Companies allowing work-from-home for their employees

    Media conglomerate Zee Entertainment enterprises has provided an anti-pollution mask to each employee and is allowing 'Work from Home' for employees who are suffering from severe respiratory problems. The organisation has also implemented the 'Flexi Working Hours' policy and has taken on board services of a doctor at its Noida office for 10 working days starting 9 November.

  • 14:04 (IST)

    NGT urges AAP government to discourage road-side parking 

    The National Green Tribunal has directed the Delhi government and the municipal corporations to ensure availability of appropriate parking facilities for cars and discourage road-side parking. A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar slammed authorities for not complying with its earlier orders to decongest traffic and asked them to take steps in a holistic manner.

  • 13:53 (IST)

    Air pollution levels hazardous in all major centres of Delhi, NCR

  • 13:49 (IST)

    BJP MP Varun Gandhi urges authorities to make cities more livable

  • 13:46 (IST)

    PM2.5 levels high in Gurugram and Faridabad too

    The air quality in the National Capital Region too is not better than most parts of Delhi. While Gurugram's AQI is at 412, while Faridabad's PM2.5 levels currently stands at 444. All figures are as of 1 pm on Sunday. 

  • 13:35 (IST)

    Why NGT's order to stop construction work may not work

    The measure to stop construction activities is also to be implemented along with the co-operation of the Centre. The construction of roads is a turnaround scheme of the present regime at the Centre and many such construction projects going on in the capital are carried out by the National Highway Authority of India.

  • 13:20 (IST)

    Environmentalist Sunita Narain holds pet coke usage responsible for pollution 

  • 13:08 (IST)

    Both Centre and state responsible for the crisis, says Sunita Narain

    Speaking to CNN News18, Sunita Narain of the Centre for Science and Environment blamed both the Centre as well as the state governments of Delhi and Punjab for the present crisis. Narain said that the biggest contributor to pollution is the use of pet coke by several industries. However, she added that India is the biggest importer of pet coke from US. Narain said that even China and US do not encourage the use of pet coke owing to pollution issues. 

  • 12:47 (IST)

    Government formulated GRAP to tackle air pollution 

    The Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority (EPCA), under the prodding of the Supreme Court, had come up with a Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) to control severe pollution in the NCR. The notification for the implementation of GRAP was done by the Ministry of Environment on 12 January this year.

  • 12:36 (IST)

    What did Beijing do to tackle air pollution? 

    After Mexico, it was Beijing's turn to enjoy the dubious distinction of being the most polluted capital city in the world. Once the Chinese government set their mind on executing an action plan, they did not digress from their objectives. They came up with a tough plan where no new car licenses were given to Beijing citizens who were given the choice of car-pooling and the use of public transportation with no exceptions granted. The Chinese are switching over to renewable energy in a big way and are reducing their dependency on coal power plants.

  • 12:19 (IST)

    Air quality level at 999 in Delhi's RK Puram

  • 12:10 (IST)

    How Mexico city tackled air pollution is a lesson to Delhi

    Mexico City faced the same problem in the early 90s and in 1992, it was dubbed the most polluted capital in the world. The Mexican government decided to put its act together and prepared a detailed contingency plan which included the compulsory use of catalytic converts in every car, major improvement in public transportation, and the preparation of an 'Atmospheric Environmental Contingency Plan’ which also includes the restriction of vehicular traffic that comes into operation every time PM 10 levels reach 221.

  • 11:51 (IST)

    Delhi smog may affect tourism, says ASSOCHAM

    The smog situation in the National Capital Region may adversely affect tourism industry, an Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (ASSOCHAM) report has suggested. The toxic smog, according to Outlook, is likely to affect the economy in sectors like tourism, transport, automobile and real estate.

  • 11:40 (IST)

    Connaught Place: Before and after smog 

  • 11:32 (IST)

    Delhi puts citizens at risk as national capital's green cover shrinks rapidly 

    As our politicians pass the buck with manful indiscrimination, not a single meaningful policy decision has been taken to tackle the basic issues involved, which include unbridled development of cities, lack of clean energy, and the abundant use of plastic, which includes not only plastic bags but thermocol as well. It is often used in temples when they dish out the free food. Then there’s the packaging industry. The list seems endless.

    Read the full article here

  • Why stopping trucks from Delhi is an impossible task

    Stopping trucks from entering Delhi is nearly impossible for the government as there is no alternative for these heavy vehicles to pass by without entering the capital city. The Centre rolled out a scheme to construct an Eastern Peripheral Highway to allow the trucks go to Punjab and Uttar Pradesh without entering the capital. The road is still being constructed and is unlikely to be completed before March 2018, which is its latest deadline. 

  • Only people's will can solve air pollution problem, says litigant

    After the NGT passed the order to implement the odd-even scheme without any exemption, Vardhaman Kaushik, another appellant in the case told Firstpost that only the will of the people can solve the problem of air pollution in the national capital.

    "People’s awareness in preserving the environment is the only solution. No court order can save us from pollution if it is not implemented as ordered," he said.

  • 11:12 (IST)

    Odd-even plan was implemented in two phases last year

    The first phase of the odd-even rule was implemented by the Delhi government from 1 to 15 January and the second phase from 15 to 30 April  last year.

    IANS

  • 11:07 (IST)

    Delhi's air is hazardous to breathe  

    At Delhi University, the PM 10 level shot up to 614, while PM 2.5 was 571. The area near the Indira Gandhi International airport saw PM 10 at 526 and PM 2.5 at 494. At Pusa, PM1 0 levels touched 489 and PM 2.5 was 469, according to SAFAR. 

  • 10:56 (IST)

    Exempt women from odd-even scheme for security reasons: DCW chief

  • Vote bank politics behind AAP government's exemptions?

    People who moved NGT against the odd-even scheme say the exemptions are nothing but the politics of the AAP-led government. "The class of people who ride two-wheelers is the vote bank of AAP. If this class is not exempted than they fear that it might turn against the party," alleges Gaurav Kumar Bansal, the advocate of appellant Mahendra Pandey.

  • 10:32 (IST)

    Delhi smog affects train services

    Continuing smog across the National Capital Region has led to the cancellation of eight trains, while 34 will be arriving late and 21 others have been rescheduled, reports ANI.

  • 10:29 (IST)

    Rise in PM 2.5 linked to heart diseases, lung cancer

    Higher levels of PM 2.5, which are the fine pollution particles, are linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease. PM 2.5 regularly topped 500 this week, at one point going over 1,000, reports AFP.

  • 10:25 (IST)

    Air pollution in Delhi and Noida under 'severe' category 

  • 10:24 (IST)

    Threefold rise in patients number at hospitals, doctors say smog shortening lives

    Doctors at the government-run Vallabhbhai Patel Chest Institute say patient numbers have more than tripled since pollution levels spiked amid a change in weather conditions and the annual post-harvest burning of crop stubble in surrounding areas.  

  • 10:19 (IST)

    Why 300 and 500 mark in Air Quality Index (AQI) is important?

    On Saturday, the NGT said that in future, the odd-even scheme should automatically come into force if the PM2.5 and PM10, particles in air with diameter less than 2.5 and 10 mm respectively, levels go above the 300 and 500 mark respectively for 48 hours.

  • 10:05 (IST)

    Punjabi Bagh is the worst affected area in Delhi, AQI levels much above danger

  • 10:04 (IST)

    Anand Vihar: PM 2.5 and PM 10 levels much above 300 and 500 in AQI

  • 09:45 (IST)

    Actor Ayushman Khurana tweets about a smog vaccuum cleaner in Beijing

  • AAP government calls off odd-even as NGT refuses to exempt women from the scheme

    One reason why the AAP government exempted women drivers had to do with the concerns regarding safety of women in Delhi. 
     

    AAP MLA, Anil Bajpai told Firstpost in this regard, “We cannot compromise on the issue of women’s safety. If odd-even is allowed without any exemption, then women’s safety might be at risk.” 

  • 09:31 (IST)

    Twitter sees the funny side of Delhi smog

  • 09:19 (IST)

    Smog engulfs Sector 137 in Noida

    Image courtesy: Asif 

  • 09:12 (IST)

    It is tough to breathe, says Delhi residents 

  • 09:05 (IST)

    Early morning visuals from India Gate

  • 08:58 (IST)

    Trucks, vehicles barred from entering Delhi as smog continues

  • 08:56 (IST)

    Updates for 12 November 2017 begin

As thick smog crept over India's capital this week and smudged landmarks from view, Nikunj Pandey could feel his eyes and throat burning.

Pandey stopped doing his regular workouts and said he felt tightness in his lungs. He started wearing a triple layer of pollution masks over his mouth. And he became angry that he couldn't safely breathe the air.

"This is a basic right," he said. "A basic right of humanity." Pandey is among many people in New Delhi who have become more aware of the toxic air in recent years and are increasingly frustrated at the lack of meaningful action by authorities.

This week the air was the worst it's been all year in the capital, with microscopic particles that can affect breathing and health spiking to 75 times the level considered safe by the World Health Organisation.

Experts have compared breathing the air to smoking a couple of packs of cigarettes a day. The Lancet medical journal recently estimated some 2.5 million Indians die each year from pollution.

Pandey said the millions of rural folk who have moved to the city understand the problem better than they once did, and are trying everything from tying scarves over their faces to eating "jaggery," a sugar cane product that some people believe offers a range of health benefits.

Representational image. PTI

Representational image. PTI

Masks once considered an affectation of hypochondriac tourists are these days routinely worn by government workers and regular people on the street.

Volunteers handed out thousands of green surgical masks this week to make a point about the pollution, but such masks likely have a limited impact on keeping out the tiny particles from people's lungs.

"This is truly a health emergency," said Anumita Roychowdhury, the executive director of research and advocacy at New Delhi's Centre for Science and Environment.

She said doctors in recent days have been dealing with a 20 percent spike in emergency hospital admissions from people suffering heart and lung problems. And that's in a city, she said, where one in every three children already has compromised lungs.

Seema Upadhyaya, who heads a primary school, said she has never before witnessed so many children suffering from respiratory illnesses as she has this year. That has prompted changes to the curriculum.

"It's impacting everybody," she said.

Authorities have been taking extraordinary measures to try to mitigate the immediate crisis. They have temporarily closed schools and stopped most trucks from entering the city. Next week they are considering rationing car usage.

But everyone agrees such measures don't address the root causes, which remain hard to solve.

Roychowdhury said the city's pollution has been trapped this week by a lack of wind at ground level, colliding winds in the upper atmosphere, and cooling temperatures.

Air quality typically gets worse at this time of year as nearby farmers burn fields and people build street fires to keep warm. The conditions this week prompted the capital's top elected official, Arvind Kejriwal, to describe his city as a "gas chamber."

While crop burning has been banned in and around the capital, officials say it's hard to punish impoverished farmers for continuing traditional methods that have been handed down through the generations.

Pandey said it's part of a broader problem in India.

"Your water is not healthy, your food is not healthy, your vegetables are polluted, they are poisoned," he said. "I mean, everything is polluted right now."

Roychowdhury said she is encouraged there is rising awareness of the air quality problem, both among residents and the medical community. But she says authorities need to do more.

She said officials have been asking people this week to use more public transport, but at the same time the city doesn't have enough buses and hasn't bought any new ones in recent years.

"What we are saying, and the Supreme Court has already asked for it, is that there should be a comprehensive plan for all sources of pollution," she said.

Meanwhile, people like Pandey say they are going to have to suffer through, because New Delhi is where they need to be based for work opportunities and their families.

"We are India, right?" he said. "We just try to survive in whatever condition we are in. That is how it is."

 

With inputs from AP


Published Date: Nov 11, 2017 09:36 pm | Updated Date: Nov 12, 2017 05:09 pm


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