It’s no surprise that pollution is a perpetual problem in India. But
it’s definitely disheartening to hear that India has slipped 32 ranks in
the global Environment Performance Index (EPI) 2014 to rank a lowly 155
and its capital Delhi has earned the dubious tag of being the world’s
most polluted city.
Link to the article @ Hindustan Times.
A comparative study of 178 countries on nine environmental parameters
released earlier this month by the US-based Yale University shows that
one of the world’s fastest growing economies is a disaster on the
environmental front.
What’s worse, India’s pollution levels could be playing havoc with
the health of its citizens. “A bottom performer on nearly every policy
issue included in the 2014 EPI, with the exception of forests, fisheries
and water resources, India’s performance lags most notably in the
protection of human health from environmental harm,” said a statement
issued by Yale.
The study described India’s air pollution as the worst in the world,
tying with China in terms of the proportion of population exposed to
average air pollution levels exceeding WHO thresholds.
A deeper look at the data gathered by a Nasa satellite showed that
Delhi had the highest particulate matter 2.5 pollution levels followed
by Beijing. Delhi, with 8.1 million registered vehicles, has repeatedly
beaten the Chinese capital on particulate matter pollution.
The high PM2.5 pollution caused by high vehicle density and
industrial emissions is the reason for the dense smog that has been
engulfing Delhi during the winter months in the last few years, with
adverse health implications. And while Beijing’s infamous smog has
hogged headlines and prompted government action, even led to the
announcement of rewards for cutting back on pollution, the dangers in
Delhi have been largely ignored.
According to a study by the Harvard International Review, every two
in five persons in Delhi suffer from respiratory ailments. The Lancet’s
Global Health Burden 2013 report termed air pollution the sixth biggest
human killer in India. The WHO last year termed air pollution
carcinogenic.
Particles smaller than 2.5 microns in diameter (PM2.5 in shorthand)
are fine enough to lodge deep in human lung and blood tissue and cause
diseases ranging from stroke to lung cancer, the Yale study said.
Anumita Roy Chaudhary, executive director of Delhi-based advocacy
group Centre for Science and Environment, said policy-makers have failed
to take the kind of action needed to check phenomenal growth in air
pollution in India. “The gains of the introduction of CNG in 2000 have
been lost. We are heading for dark days if policy-makers fail to wake up
to the growing environmental health hazard,” she said.
The Central Pollution Control Board’s report of 2011 said only two
cities, Kochi and Coimbatore, met the national ambient air quality
standards, which are six times higher than WHO standards. Air pollution
in half of the 280 Indian cities monitored has been termed critical or
hazardous for human health. “Air pollution levels in almost all cities
are on the upward trend,” said a CPCB scientist.
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