Yahoo – AFP,
Bhuvan Bagga, 6 April 2015
India's prime minister suggested Monday the country's "age-old traditions" could be used to ease its choking smog, as he launched a new air quality index for the world's most polluted capital.
India's prime minister suggested Monday the country's "age-old traditions" could be used to ease its choking smog, as he launched a new air quality index for the world's most polluted capital.
Narendra
Modi proposed making every Sunday "bicycle day" and switching off
street lights during a full moon, amid growing public concern over the impact
of air pollution on the health of India's 1.2 billion people.
"There
can be green solutions in our age-old traditions," he said in a speech at
a conference of environmental policymakers in the capital New Delhi.
![]() |
Motorists
clog a highway in New Delhi,
on February 18, 2015 (AFP Photo/Money
Sharma)
|
"It is
only a small thing, but you can imagine how much energy could be saved and
emissions could be cut if all the street lights were switched off during a full
moon."
The
government said the new index would initially cover 10 cities -- Delhi, Agra,
Kanpur, Lucknow, Varanasi, Faridabad, Ahmedabad, Chennai, Bangalore and
Hyderabad -- each of which would have monitoring stations with Air Quality
Index display boards.
The
government is under intense pressure to act after the World Health Organization
last year declared New Delhi the world's most polluted capital.
At least
3,000 people die prematurely every year in the city because of air pollution,
according to a joint study by Boston-based Health Effects Institute and Delhi's
Energy Resources Institute.
Modi also
signalled that India would not bow to foreign pressure on tackling climate
change, ahead of UN-led talks late this year in Paris on reducing greenhouse
gas emissions.
"The
world guides us on climate change and we follow them? The world sets the
parameters and we follow them? It is not like that... India can lead the
world," he said.
Environment
Minister Prakash Javadekar said the new index could drive efforts to ease air
pollution.
But he gave
little indication of what the government would do except to promise new rules
on disposing of construction waste.
The dust
from India's thousands of industrial and construction sites adds to the fumes
from millions of vehicles to create the toxic cocktail that city-dwellers
breathe.
Many experts
were unimpressed.
![]() |
Cows find
food in garbage dumped and burnt on the roadside in Faridabad, on
the outskirts
of New Delhi, on February 18, 2015 (AFP Photo/Money Sharma)
|
"Monitoring
pollution is not a solution to stop pollution," said ecologist Vandana
Shiva, adding Modi's campaign to attract foreign companies to manufacture in
India would only exacerbate the problem.
"It's
like finding a very sick person and instead of treating him, you hand him a
thermometer. You have to take strict policy action, not launch symbolic
measures."
Greenpeace
welcomed the new index but said it had expected the government "to address
the issue with more rigour and responsibility".
"Delhi
is facing a public health emergency and an air quality index needs to be matched
with actionable plans on how to bring the pollution levels down," said
campaigner Aishwarya Madineni in a statement.
"This
is merely (a) bandaid on a wound that needs stitches, the bleeding is going to
continue."
Delhi
worse than Beijing
A World
Health Organization study of 1,600 cities released last year showed Delhi had
the world's highest annual average concentration of small airborne particles
known as PM2.5 -- higher even than Beijing.
These
extremely fine particles of less than 2.5 micrometres in diameter are linked
with increased rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease as
they penetrate deep into the lungs and can pass into the bloodstream.
India
disputed the WHO's assertion, but has conceded that air pollution in the
capital is comparable with that of Beijing.
![]() |
Fog casts a
blanket over the Red
Fort in New Delhi, in 2009 (AFP
Photo/Raveendran)
|
The reading
from the US embassy in Beijing was just 53, which is considered moderate.
A new
government website for the index, which will provide colour-coded air quality
rankings ranging from "good" to "severe", went live on
Monday morning, but could not be accessed. Officials said it had likely
collapsed under high demand.
The aim is
for the index to eventually cover 66 cities.
The
government gave few details about the new rules on construction waste. Delhi
generates up to 4,000 tonnes of construction debris every day, according to a
2014 study by the Centre for Science and Environment.
Policymakers
have suggested restrictions on private vehicles, higher pollution-related taxes
and stricter enforcement of urban planning laws.
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