November 18, 2024

People get relief from air pollution Delhi, Possibility of rain

Delhi/Alive News: Air quality in several areas of Delhi improved slightly on Tuesday morning due to rain and favourable wind speed caused by a western disturbance affecting northwest India.As at 6 am today, the AQI was recorded at 374 in Anand Vihar, 301 in Shadipur, 397 in Rohini, 355 in Sirifort, according to data by the Central Pollution Control Board

Till 8:30 pm on Monday, the Safdarjung Observatory, the national capital’s primary weather station, recorded 7.2 mm of rainfall. An official at the India Meteorological Department said that due to the rain, the wind speed improved to 20 kilometres per hour, aiding the dispersion of pollutants, news agency PTI reported. At 10 pm yesterday, Delhi’s AQI stood at 387, improving from 395 at 4 pm and 400 at 9 am.

The air quality is likely to improve further since more shower is predicted in Delhi and its surrounding areas today. “Light intensity rain/drizzle would continue to occur over and adjoining areas of NCR (Ballabhgarh) Sohana, Palwal, Nuh, Aurangabad, Hodal (Haryana) Bijnaur, Chandpur, Amroha, Moradabad, Sambhal, Billari, Chandausi, Jahangirabad, Anupshahar, Bahajoi, others during the next 2 hours,” the Regional Weather Forecasting Centre said on Tuesday.

The 24-hour average AQI, recorded at 4 pm every day, was 395 on Sunday, 389 on Saturday, 415 on Friday, 390 on Thursday, 394 on Wednesday, 365 on Tuesday, 348 on Monday and 301 on November 19.An AQI between zero and 50 is considered ‘good’, 51 and 100 ‘satisfactory’, 101 and 200 ‘moderate’, 201 and 300 ‘poor’, 301 and 400 ‘very poor’, 401 and 450 ‘severe’ and above 450 ‘severe-plus’.The national capital has recorded 10 severe air quality days this November so far.

The city recorded just three severe air quality days in November last year, while it experienced 12 such days in 2021, the maximum in the month since the Central Pollution Control Board began monitorin According to a joint project by the Delhi government and the Indian Institute of Technology -Kanpur, biomass burning was the top reason for Delhi’s foul air, contributing 31 to 51 per cent to the national capital’s air pollution in the last few days.