Smog shuts schools in Delhi
November 6, 2016
New Delhi announced a slew of measures Sunday to combat the crippling air pollution that has recently engulfed the city, including closing down schools, halting construction and ordering that all roads be doused with water to settle dust. A coal-fueled power plant on the edges of the city was also to be shuttered for 10 days.
Pollutants in the atmosphere recently breached the 1,000-microgram mark for the first time in one neighborhood in south Delhi - 10 times the World Health Organization's recommended "safe" level.
Emergency measures are needed to solve this problem together," state Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said. "All construction and demolition in the city will be banned for next five days. All schools will be closed for the next three days in Delhi."
Thick smog has blanketed the capital for days, with local and central authorities meeting to resolve the crisis. Other measures announced by the government include fighting fires at landfill sites.
Crop burning a major factor
Slash-and-burn agriculture in other nearby states has been blamed for some of the thick smog. India's environment minister, Anil Madhav Dave, who met with the state's leadership on Saturday, is expected to discuss solutions to the problem posed by crop burning with leaders of neighboring states this week.
Automobiles - which contribute to the city's poor air quality - have also been restricted. A pilot program that had taken around a million cars off the roads for 15 days in a bid to improve air quality earlier this year could again be implemented.
The "odd-even" plan restricts cars to alternate days according to their number plates. Those restrictions were unpopular as the capital's public transport infrastructure struggled to shoulder the added demand.
jar/tj (AFP, Reuters)