Delhi air pollution levels at 'severe plus', authorities say

Vocabulary: 240, Words: 428

Reuters A man sweeps a road near India Gate as the sky is enveloped with smog after Delhi's air quality turned "severe" due to alarming air pollution, in New Delhi, India, November 18, 2024. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis

1Air pollution in India's capital Delhi has soared to extremely severe levels, choking residents and engulfing the city in thick smog.

2Monitors recorded pollution levels of 1,500 on the Air Quality Index (AQI) at 15:00 IST (09:30 BST), according to tech company IQAir - 15 times the level the Word Health Organization (WHO) considers satisfactory for breathing.

3The toxic air has disrupted flight services, and had already prompted authorities to shut schools and ban construction work in the city.

4It comes just weeks after Lahore, in neighbouring Pakistan, also recorded pollution levels above 1,000.

5And experts warn that the situation could get worse in Delhi in the coming days, saying more severe measures may be needed to combat the city's pollution problem.

6According to the WHO, air with AQI values above 300 are considered to be hazardous for health.

7India's pollution control authority has classified the air in Delhi as "severe plus", after the city passed 450 according to its measurements on Monday morning.

8As well as shutting schools and banning construction work, the city has also banned the entry of non-essential trucks into Delhi and has asked all offices to ask 50% of their staff to work from home.

9Last week, the government banned all activities that involve the use of coal and firewood, as well as diesel generator use for non-emergency services.

Reuters FILE PHOTO: Men play badminton at Lodhi Garden while the sky is enveloped with smog after Delhi's air quality turned "hazardous" due to alarming air pollution, in New Delhi, India, November 15, 2024. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis/File Photo

10Every year, Delhi, India's northern states and parts of Pakistan battle hazardous air during the winter months of October to January due to plummeting temperatures, smoke, dust, low wind speed, vehicular emissions and crop stubble burning.

11And every year, the government imposes pollution control measures during these months.

12Yet, Delhi's pollution problem hasn't gone away.

13On Monday, Delhi's Chief Minister Atishi said that all of northern India was experiencing a "medical emergency" due to stubble burning continuing unchecked across the country, particularly in the neighbouring states of Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.

14She accused the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of not taking steps to curb the practice despite the problem intensifying over the past five years.

15The BJP, in turn, has blamed Delhi's ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) for not being able to put a check to pollution in the city.

16Meanwhile, Delhi's residents continue to gasp for air.

17"Woke up with a itchy, painful throat.. even two air purifiers are not making the AQI breathable indoors. 18Children are breathing in gas chamber," one user wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

19Another user called for a "peaceful mass protest on the streets". 20"The air we breathe is lethally toxic," he wrote.

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from BBC