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This Article is From Feb 07, 2019

New Anti-Pollution Plan Stumbles; Patiala Only Indian City To Breathe Fresh Air

New Anti-Pollution Plan Stumbles; Patiala Only Indian City To Breathe Fresh Air
The India Gate monument stands shrouded in smog in New Delhi, India. (Photographer: Anindito Mukherjee/Bloomberg)  

Almost a month after the launch of a national programme for air pollution abatement, cities across India—home to 14 of the most polluted cities in the world—continued to breathe toxic air during the winter of 2018-19.

Only Patiala among 74 cities assessed by the Central Pollution Control Board met the national safe air standards as on Feb. 4, said a CPCB daily bulletin.

On Jan. 17, Ghaziabad, an industrial city bordering capital Delhi, reported a 24-hour average for toxic particulate matter 2.5 that was 14 times higher than World Health Organization's safe standard. The PM 2.5 average that day in Ghaziabad was six times higher than even India's own, more lenient, safe-air standard. The national standard allows 2.4 times higher levels of particulate matter than the WHO's.

The air quality in the world's most polluted city, Delhi—home to 20 million people—remained above safe limits almost all days this winter between Nov. 2018 and the first week of January, IndiaSpend reported on Jan. 17.

To fix this pollution crisis, the Indian government launched its first-ever national framework called National Clean Air Programme on Jan. 10.

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