NEW DELHI: India´s capital New Delhi switched schools to online classes on Monday until further notice as worsening toxic smog surged past 60 times the World Health Organisation´s recommended daily maximum.
Various piecemeal government initiatives have failed to measurably address the problem, with the smog blamed for thousands of premature deaths each year and particularly impacting the health of children and the elderly.
Levels of PM2.5 pollutants — dangerous cancer-causing microparticles that enter the bloodstream through the lungs — peaked at 921 micrograms per cubic metre at midday on Monday, according to IQAir pollution monitors, with a reading above 15 in a 24-hour period considered unhealthy by the WHO.
Individual monitoring stations noted even higher levels — one government-run monitor recorded PM2.5 pollutants at 1117 micrograms, 74 times the WHO maximum. “My eyes have been burning for the last few days”, said rickshaw puller Subodh Kumar, 30.
“Pollution or no pollution, I have to be on the road, where else will I go?” he said, pausing from eating breakfast at a roadside stall. “We don´t have an option to stay indoors… our livelihood, food, and life — everything is in the open.”
Dense grey and acrid smog smothered New Delhi, with IQAir listing conditions as “hazardous”. The city is blanketed in poisonous smog each year, primarily blamed on stubble burning by farmers in neighbouring regions to clear their fields for ploughing, as well as factories and traffic fumes.
A report by The New York Times this month, based on samples collected over five years, revealed dangerous fumes also spewing from a power plant incinerating the city´s landfill garbage mountains.
Primary schools were ordered to cease in-person classes on Thursday, with a raft of further restrictions imposed on Monday, including limiting diesel-powered trucks and construction. Authorities hope by keeping children at home, traffic will be reduced.
The government urged children and the elderly, as well as those with lung or heart issues “to stay indoors as much as possible”. Air filters are too expensive for many, and most do not have homes they can effectively seal from the misery of dangerous foul-smelling air.
“The rich ministers and officials can afford to stay indoors, not ordinary people like us,” said rickshaw taxi driver Rinku Kumar, 45. “Who can even afford an air purifier when paying monthly bills is a challenge?”
India´s Supreme Court last month ruled that clean air was a fundamental human right, ordering both the central government and state-level authorities to take action. It is meeting again on Monday to discuss the lack of progress on the health crisis.