At the time of publishing this story, Delhi’s air quality index reads a ‘hazardous’ 552. While that of the notoriously noxious Beijing stands at a pleasant 25. The China reading is not State-sponsored, it’s from the US Embassy’s air quality index, because we inherently don’t trust all things Chinese.
What happened? How did Delhi steal the ‘dirty crown’ mantle from Beijing, for good?
The air in Beijing and most of eastern China remains noxious by WHO standards but 2015 was the cleanest and freshest air, which Beijing residents breathed in a long, long time.
After 2013, that’s when China stopped living in denial about the smoggy soup its population was living in, they came up with the National Air Pollution Action Plan, a four-level alert system and a reserve of 7.5 trillion rupees (760 billion yuan) to get its act together. At the core of that is a scheme to cut back coal use in the big metropolitan regions and restrict car emissions.
The highest mark, the ‘red alert’ which has been issued twice in the last three years when the air quality index touched the 200 mark, warrants a complete shutdown of the city.
The cost of disobedience in China is severe. If there is a factory which releases illegal emission for 10 days, the penalty is 10 times bigger.
China’s addiction with burning coal accounts for 60 percent of the PM 2.5 in their country; for the first time in this century, burning coal declined in 2014 compared to 2013.
And still the level of awareness about the toxicity of smog is abysmally low in India. Air purifiers are still seen as fancy things for the rich and even those with dire health conditions don’t don masks.
In India, neither the Modi government nor Kejriwal’s AAP, both of which stormed to power, didn’t list curbing pollution as an election priority.
The first smog attack post the World War II in LA was so bad that people thought it was the Japanese starting chemical warfare. As the population spiked, economy thrived and the number of cars reached two million by 1950, LA started slipping into a toxic haze. The government came up with a formula:
Step 1: Face facts, accept them and own them. So in official lingo, it was never hazy or overcast, it was always smoggy.
Step 2: The Clean Air Act was passed in 1963, it set up an air quality standard and the government then did whatever it takes to reach that limit. Car manufacturers had to comply with stringent emission standards as well.
Step 3: By 2030, California aims to have goods with ‘zero emission’ technology.
There are many ways which will make Delhi breathable once again, let’s hope our policymakers get their act together to deal with this epidemic.
Related Read: Your 8-Point Guide to Surviving Delhi's Deadly Pollution
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 07 Nov 2016,08:40 PM IST