City
Epaper

Covid-induced lockdown improved air quality in India: Study

By IANS | Updated: June 2, 2021 18:30 IST

Ranchi, June 2 The first Covid-19 lockdown in India led to an improvement in air quality and a ...

Open in App

Ranchi, June 2 The first Covid-19 lockdown in India led to an improvement in air quality and a reduction in land surface temperature in Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad, say researchers.

The study led by scientists from the Central University of Jharkhand and University of Southampton in the UK found that the significant environmental improvement was due to an abrupt reduction in industrial activities and a major decrease in the use of land and air transport.

The team used data from a range of Earth Observation sensors, including those from the European Space Agency's Sentinel-5p and NASA's MODIS sensors, to measure changes in surface temperature and atmospheric pollutants and aerosols.They compared data from the 2020 March to May lockdown with pre-pandemic years in Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad.

Their findings, published in the journal Environmental Research, revealed a significant reduction in Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2), a greenhouse gas emitted from the combustion of fossil fuels, which equated to an average decrease of 12 per cent throughout India and 31.5 per cent over the six cities. There was a 40 per cent reduction over the national capital.

The study also found Land Surface Temperature over major cities in India substantially declined in contrast with the previous five-year average (2015-2019) with day temperatures being up to 1 degree Celsius cooler and those at night up to 2 degree Celsius cooler.

"The lockdown provided a natural experiment to understand the coupling between urbanisation and local microclimate. We clearly observed that reduction in atmospheric pollutants (due to reduction in anthropogenic activity during lockdown) resulted in a decrease in local day and night-time temperature. This is an important finding to feed into the planning for sustainable urban development," said Professor Jadu Dash, from University of Southampton.

Further, the atmospheric fluxes at the surface and top of the atmosphere also saw a significant decline over major parts of India. The reduction of greenhouse gas concentration, higher atmospheric water vapour content and meteorological conditions played a complex role in the land and near-surface temperature reduction.

"The aerosol type sources, such as organic carbon (OC), black carbon (BC), mineral dust, and sea salt also reduced significantly," said Bikash Parida, from Central University of Jharkhand.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Central University of JharkhandBikash paridadelhiranchiUniversity Of Southampton`delhiDelhi capitalSouth delhi district administrationIto delhiGhaziabad district administrationDelhi nct
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Bomb Threat: DU Colleges Receive Threatening Mails, Police Launch Massive Search

MaharashtraRift Within NCP? DY CM Sunetra Pawar’s Solo Delhi Visit Sparks Political Buzz; Parth Pawar Calls Reports ‘Baseless’

NationalDelhi Government Orders Removal of 2.5 Lakh Chinese CCTV Cameras Over Security Concerns

NationalNitish Kumar Likely to Resign as Bihar Chief Minister After April 13; Rajya Sabha Oath Set for April 10

NationalDelhi Shocker: Man Lured Via Dating App, Robbed of Rs 7 Lakh, Accused Arrested

International Realted Stories

InternationalETGE, Uyghur groups protest in US, Canada alleging ‘ongoing genocide’ in Xinjiang

InternationalPrahaar pressure: Desperate ISI pushes Khalistani groups for strikes in north India

International"Trump's profanity is unsurprising," says Professor at Isfahan University as Hormuz 'deadline' looms

InternationalPakistan: Protests held in Sindh against rise in petroleum prices, inflation

InternationalIndian envoy meets Bangladesh PM, stresses forward-looking approach based on mutual interest