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Delhi Air So Dirty You Can Taste And Smell It


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 Even for a city considered one of the world's most polluted, the national capital hit a new low this past week.

Air so dirty you can taste and smell it; a gray haze that makes a gentle stroll a serious health hazard.

According to one advocacy group, government data shows that the smog that enveloped New Delhi was the worst in the last 17 years.

 

The concentration of PM 2.5, tiny particulate pollution that can clog lungs, averaged close to 700 micrograms per cubic metre. That's 12 times the government norm and a whopping 70 times the WHO standards.

The Delhi winter, once a glorious time of clear, crisp days that meant holidays and weekends spent picnicking in its many public parks - is now a time of annual health woes.

 

As millions struggle with hacking coughs and burning eyes, many schools across the city have either shut down or ended all outdoor activities. Doctors have asked people to stay indoors during the worst days.

 

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Yet many of the problems that turn Delhi's air so toxic continue unabated. People still set off massive amounts of festival fireworks, piles of garbage burn all night and dust from the construction projects that dot the city is unchecked.

And at the start of every winter, farmers in the states bordering the city begin burning straw from their rice paddy crop to clear the fields for planting wheat.

 

 

"Sources of pollution in Delhi and outside of Delhi have exponentially increased in the last couple of days," said Polash Mukerjee, a research associate with the Centre for Science and Environment, a Delhi-based research and lobbying organization.

He said that wind direction is blowing towards Delhi from all directions, especially from Punjab and Haryana, "where there are large incidences of crop fires that we are detecting even today."


Over the last two years, the government has tried a slew of measures to control air pollution, including stricter emission norms for cars and a tax on diesel-fueled trucks that enter the city.

New Delhi also has attempted to limit the number of cars during the winter months, when air quality is at its worst. Twice the city imposed a two-week period in which cars were allowed on the roads only on even or odd days, depending on the vehicle's license plate number.

Last month, the city launched a smartphone application called "Change the Air," inviting residents to send photos and complaints about sources of pollution, from the burning of leaves and garbage in public parks to construction crews working without dust control measures.

But despite announcing new measures, the city has struggled with enforcing them on a regular basis.

One of the biggest struggles is crop burning in neighbouring areas, where despite attempting to impose cash fines on farmers enforcement has been hard. For the farmers, it's cheaper to burn rice paddy straw than hire people to carry it away.

"Pollution is also caused by diesel cars, factories and many other sources. Farmers only do this for one month of the year," Bijendar Singh, a farmer in neighbouring Haryana, said as he watched his paddy straw burn.

 

"It is a compulsion for farmers to do this. Because of this compulsion, we spread air pollution. As much as it harms the people sitting in Delhi, it harms us and our children even more," he said.

Mr Mukerjee, the research associate, said that the government hasn't worked out a strategy to help farmers dispose of their crop waste.

"Paddy straw that lies in your field today, as a farmer, it is absolutely worthless to me. I don't earn anything out of it. Why should I spend money collecting it?" Mr Mukherjee said.


 

@Stuge :mask::hehe:

 

 

http://www.ndtv.com/delhi-news/in-delhi-toxic-air-millions-with-burning-eyes-hacking-cough-schools-close-1621756?pfrom=home-lateststories

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I have been writing about pollution and the need to develop a culture that keeps environment first since a long time 

 

For a civilization that is said to be 4k to 5k years old, the struggle to even keep its streets clean, not invest in optimized waste management systems, block up its water system with waste, inefficient landfills, open sewage, etc should be unacceptable

 

Edited by zen
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14 hours ago, Sajid_Rana said:

Lahore is a mess too with smog covering almost whole city. NASA has confirmed the smog is coming from India. Why farmers are burning their crops? 

After what you lot having been sending us for the past decade, thank god that we have only been sending you some floating peck of dusts.

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4 hours ago, radhika said:

Today is better but I had to shampoo three times to get the bloody dirt out of my hair.I was out just for 4-5 hrs yesterday.:frown:

Hope tomorrow is better.

 

@laaloostill hurting:frown:????Get over her man:nevermind:.....she supports Kejriwal.:police:

Now you know why I dumped her

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1 hour ago, jalebi_bhai said:

People need to stop blaming govts. (state or centre) for all their problems. Sanitation is the responsibility of the community as much as it is of the govt. Instead of investing in vehicles you don't need, why don't Delhiites invest in their environment?

Not just Delhi, Indians in general don't give a shit of anything other than their own lives, paycheck and house. I remember seeing people in Calcutta, keeping the inside of their house spic and span but throw garbage out in the street. I have seen Indians here boasting of working for Google and Microsoft, making $200k a year and still not buy deodorant, not practice any sort of recycling. Indians inherently are dirty and selfish and that's how they run their cities, villages and country. And in comparison, look at Japan. 

 

 

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