City
Epaper

Air quality in Kolkata dips to ‘very unhealthy’ category

By IANS | Updated: November 15, 2024 14:00 IST

Kolkata, Nov 15 Air quality in Kolkata has started dipping with a drop in temperature as AQI levels ...

Open in App

Kolkata, Nov 15 Air quality in Kolkata has started dipping with a drop in temperature as AQI levels ranged between 204 and 290 since Thursday.

The AQI level range between 201 and 300 comes under the “purple” or “very unhealthy” category. It involves health warnings of conditions where the entire population in a city is more likely to be affected.

The level is just above the worst AQI level between 301 and 500, which comes under the “maroon” or “hazardous” category involving more serious health effects on the entire population.

Kolkata’s AQI quality remained good before the Diwali and Kali Puja because of the winds of Cyclone Dana.

However, it started deteriorating sharply from the night before Diwali or Kali Puja because of the unbridled bursting of firecrackers. Similar bursting of firecrackers during the Chhath Puja aggravated the deterioration further.

According to green-technologist and environmental activist Somendra Mohan Ghosh the basic flaw lies in the fact that the Indian air quality standards are more lenient compared to the World Health Organization's (WHO) guidelines.

“The permissible limits under the Indian National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for particulate matters like PM2.5 and PM10 as well as other items like nitrogen dioxide, ozone, carbon monoxide and sulphur dioxide is much more lenient than those permissible under WHO guidelines,” said Ghosh.

“Exposure to air pollution above WHO guidelines can lead to respiratory problems like asthma or COPD, cardiovascular diseases, lung cancer, neurological damage and premature mortality,” Ghosh pointed out.

According to him, there is an urgent necessity to revise NAAQS aligning with the WHO guidelines.

“At that same time there should be stricter emission controls, promotion of clean energy resources and implementation of effective waste management. What is equally necessary is enhancing public awareness and education,” said Ghosh.

Meanwhile, Delhi-NCR's air quality remained severely poor for the third consecutive day, with the national Capital's Air Quality Index (AQI) reaching a severe level of 409 early on Friday morning and the readings being above the 300 mark in neighbouring cities in Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.

According to the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), the region continues to suffer from hazardous pollution levels as winter approaches, with many of the cities in Delhi's neighbourhood registering dangerously high AQI values.

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

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalNorth Korea fires 1st ballistic missiles in five months ahead of Trump's trip to APEC summit

International"Fast, furious and brutal": Trump warns Hamas could be 'put out in two minutes' if they violate ceasefire

Cricket"They'll have to play aggressive cricket to win in Australia": Ponting shares peice of advice to England ahead of Ashes

TechnologyIndia’s luxury goods market to see 10 pc growth at $12.1 billion by 2025: Report

BusinessIndia’s luxury goods market to see 10 pc growth at $12.1 billion by 2025: Report

National Realted Stories

NationalChennai Metro rail steps up flood preparedness as northeast monsoon intensifies

NationalWanted murder accused nabbed after gunfight in Delhi's Dwarka, cop injured

NationalChanges in Prez Murmu’s travel plans to Sabarimala temple due to inclement weather

NationalCM Yogi extends Govardhan Puja greetings, performs rituals at Gorakhnath Temple

NationalChennai Police on high alert as rain intensifies, 12 rescue teams deployed