Indian air quality

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mr friendly guy
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Indian air quality

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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/26/world ... ience&_r=3
Beijing’s Bad Air Would Be Step Up for Smoggy Delhi

By GARDINER HARRISJAN. 25, 2014

NEW DELHI — In mid-January, air pollution in Beijing was so bad that the government issued urgent health warnings and closed four major highways, prompting the panicked buying of air filters and donning of face masks. But in New Delhi, where pea-soup smog created what was by some measurements even more dangerous air, there were few signs of alarm in the country’s boisterous news media, or on its effervescent Twittersphere.

Despite Beijing’s widespread reputation of having some of the most polluted air of any major city in the world, an examination of daily pollution figures collected from both cities suggests that New Delhi’s air is more laden with dangerous small particles of pollution, more often, than Beijing’s. Lately, a very bad air day in Beijing is about an average one in New Delhi.

The United States Embassy in Beijing sent out warnings in mid-January, when a measure of harmful fine particulate matter known as PM2.5 went above 500, in the upper reaches of the measurement scale, for the first time this year. This refers to particulate matter less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, which is believed to pose the greatest health risk because it penetrates deeply into lungs.

But for the first three weeks of this year, New Delhi’s average daily peak reading of fine particulate matter from Punjabi Bagh, a monitor whose readings are often below those of other city and independent monitors, was 473, more than twice as high as the average of 227 in Beijing. By the time pollution breached 500 in Beijing for the first time on the night of Jan. 15, Delhi had already had eight such days. Indeed, only once in three weeks did New Delhi’s daily peak value of fine particles fall below 300, a level more than 12 times the exposure limit recommended by the World Health Organization.

“It’s always puzzled me that the focus is always on China and not India,” said Dr. Angel Hsu, director of the environmental performance measurement program at the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy. “China has realized that it can’t hide behind its usual opacity, whereas India gets no pressure to release better data. So there simply isn’t good public data on India like there is for China.”

Experts have long known that India’s air is among the worst in the world. A recent analysis by Yale researchers found that seven of the 10 countries with the worst air pollution exposures are in South Asia. And evidence is mounting that Indians pay a higher price for air pollution than almost anyone. A recent study showed that Indians have the world’s weakest lungs, with far less capacity than Chinese lungs. Researchers are beginning to suspect that India’s unusual mix of polluted air, poor sanitation and contaminated water may make the country among the most dangerous in the world for lungs.

India has the world’s highest death rate because of chronic respiratory diseases, and it has more deaths from asthma than any other nation, according to the World Health Organization. A recent study found that half of all visits to doctors in India are for respiratory problems, according to Sundeep Salvi, director of the Chest Research Foundation in Pune.

Clean Air Asia, an advocacy group, found that another common measure of pollution known as PM10, for particulate matter less than 10 micrometers in diameter, averaged 117 in Beijing in a six-month period in 2011. In New Delhi, the Center for Science and Environment used government data and found that an average measure of PM10 in 2011 was 281, nearly two-and-a-half times higher.

Perhaps most worrisome, Delhi’s peak daily fine particle pollution levels are 44 percent higher this year than they were last year, when they averaged 328 over the first three weeks of the year. Fine particle pollution has been strongly linked with premature death, heart attacks, strokes and heart failure. In October, the World Health Organization declared that it caused lung cancer.

The United States Embassy in Beijing posts on Twitter the readings of its air monitor, helping to spur awareness of the problem. The readings have more than 35,000 followers. The United States does not release similar readings from its New Delhi Embassy, saying the Indian government releases its own figures.

In China, concerns about air quality have transfixed many urban residents, and some government officials say curbing the pollution is a priority.

But in India, Delhi’s newly elected regional government did not mention air pollution among its 18 priorities, and India’s environment minister quit in December amid widespread criticism that she was delaying crucial industrial projects. Her replacement, the government’s petroleum minister, almost immediately approved several projects that could add considerably to pollution. India and China strenuously resisted pollution limits in global climate talks in Warsaw in November.

Frank Hammes, chief executive of IQAir, a Swiss-based maker of air filters, said his company’s sales were hundreds of times higher in China than in India.

“In China, people are extremely concerned about the air, especially around small children,” Mr. Hammes said. “Why there’s not the same concern in India is puzzling.”

In multiple interviews, Delhiites expressed a mixture of unawareness and despair about the city’s pollution levels. “I don’t think pollution is a major concern for Delhi,” said Akanksha Singh, a 20-year-old engineering student who lives on Delhi’s outskirts in Ghaziabad, adding that he felt that Delhi’s pollution problems were not nearly as bad as those of surrounding towns.

In 1998, India’s Supreme Court ordered that Delhi’s taxis, three-wheelers and buses be converted to compressed natural gas, but the resulting improvements in air quality were short-lived as cars flooded the roads. In the 1970s, Delhi had about 800,000 vehicles; now it has 7.5 million, with 1,400 more added daily.

“Now the air is far worse than it ever was,” said Anumita Roy Chowdhury, executive director of the Center for Science and Environment.

Indians’ relatively poor lung function has long been recognized, but researchers assumed for years that the difference was genetic.

Then a 2010 study found that the children of Indian immigrants who were born and raised in the United States had far better lung function than those born and raised in India.

“It’s not genetics; it’s mostly the environment,” said Dr. MyLinh Duong, an assistant professor of respirology at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.

In a study published in October, Dr. Duong compared lung tests taken in 38,517 healthy nonsmokers from 17 countries who were matched by height, age and sex. Indians’ lung function was by far the lowest among those tested.

All of this has led some wealthy Indians to consider leaving.

Annat Jain, a private equity investor who returned to India in 2001 after spending 12 years in the United States, said his father died last year of heart failure worsened by breathing problems. Now his 4-year-old daughter must be given twice-daily breathing treatments.

“But whenever we leave the country, everyone goes back to breathing normally,” he said. “It’s something my wife and I talk about constantly.”
This statement just says it all - "Lately, a very bad air day in Beijing is about an average one in New Delhi."

This is a silly question, but what polluting industries does India have that would cause worse pollution than Beijing? I thought India's great plan was to try and skip a lot of manufacturing phase of economic development and go into services.
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K. A. Pital
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Re: Indian air quality

Post by K. A. Pital »

India never really had a "services" plan; it just failed to industrialize properly and had to start very late with the most primitive and dirtiest industry that there is. Partly thanks to the British, partly thanks to the post-independence leadership, partly thanks to the utterly fragmented power system, where one state's government is almost like another nation-state next to a bordering state (the colossal gap between Kerala and the rest of India is very symptomatic).
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Re: Indian air quality

Post by Irbis »

House heating? When you burn trash and plastics in dispersed small stoves, it produces horribly dirty smoke, but it's very cheap. Seeing size of the city and that it's the middle of winter it would be my first guess.
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Re: Indian air quality

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They do burn fuelwood still, you're right. Just thinking about heating those monstrous cities the old village-like way pains my heart.
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Re: Indian air quality

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Stas Bush wrote:They do burn fuelwood still, you're right. Just thinking about heating those monstrous cities the old village-like way pains my heart.
I need to clear (ha!) a few things first:

- On average, India is a very warm country. We need heating less than a lot countries do, including China. This means that fire-stoves are burnt less regularly for heat and more often for shorter durations (cooking)
- The pollution problem is primarily with Delhi and Kolkata, thanks to their lax regulation and geographic location. Mumbai, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Pune are far better.
- That said, a lot of regulations are in place and enforced. Metros have six-monthly pollution tests for all vehicles, our new vehicle norms are up to fairly recent Euro standards (Euro-V equivalent) and all public transport at least in Mumbai and Delhi is either electric (rail) or compressed natural gas (CNG) which burns far cleaner than petrol or diesel.

I can speak for Mumbai that it is quite good by Asian standards when it comes to air pollution. Agreed that Delhi can be bad in winters, but it's not as horrendous as it is made out to be. Yes, anecdotal I know, but I'm married to a Delhi girl so my information is second-hand.
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Re: Indian air quality

Post by K. A. Pital »

UnderAGreySky wrote:
Stas Bush wrote:They do burn fuelwood still, you're right. Just thinking about heating those monstrous cities the old village-like way pains my heart.
I need to clear (ha!) a few things first:

- On average, India is a very warm country. We need heating less than a lot countries do, including China. This means that fire-stoves are burnt less regularly for heat and more often for shorter durations (cooking)
- The pollution problem is primarily with Delhi and Kolkata, thanks to their lax regulation and geographic location. Mumbai, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Pune are far better.
- That said, a lot of regulations are in place and enforced. Metros have six-monthly pollution tests for all vehicles, our new vehicle norms are up to fairly recent Euro standards (Euro-V equivalent) and all public transport at least in Mumbai and Delhi is either electric (rail) or compressed natural gas (CNG) which burns far cleaner than petrol or diesel.

I can speak for Mumbai that it is quite good by Asian standards when it comes to air pollution. Agreed that Delhi can be bad in winters, but it's not as horrendous as it is made out to be. Yes, anecdotal I know, but I'm married to a Delhi girl so my information is second-hand.
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And I've suspected that the North has it much, much worse than the South. The South, especially near the coastline, in addition to not really being in need of heating, also has the ocean winds to sweep the bad air away routinely. From what I read on Wikipedia, it seems that roads, surprisingly, are a far bigger culprit here than I'd think:
Contrary to popular belief, most of the air pollution in Delhi is not due to vehicular traffic. Main contributors to particulate matter in the PM10 range, as a recent study shows, are road dust (50%) and industry (23%)--vehicles accounted for only 7%.
I wonder what's up with the roads...
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Re: Indian air quality

Post by Sea Skimmer »

Bad drainage plus no curbs wouldn't be surprising road problem, since it isn't a region that likes grass it'd then mean lots of stuff washes or is tracked onto the roads, then dries out and gets blown in the air by vehicles. Scooting around on Google maps, it sure looks like vast areas of the city would have this problem. The area is dry enough it gets outright dust storms after all.
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Re: Indian air quality

Post by PainRack »

Regarding the difference between India and China complaints, I suspect the real reason is that China air quality is visibly bad, whereas in India, the air doesn't visibly look bad all of the time. It just looks very dusty, which people will attribute to a natural cause.
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