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New Delhi experiences suffocating smog every year around the Diwali festival, when farmers in north India burn the stubble left behind after the harvest and revellers let off smoke-spewing firecrackers. Photo: Agence France-Presse

New Delhi closes coal-fired power plant as smog worsens during annual Diwali festival

Diesel generators and firecrackers also banned as dangerous air pollutants reach eight times the World Health Organisation’s safe limit

India

India’s environmental watchdog shut down a coal-fired power plant and banned the use of diesel generators in New Delhi as air quality plummeted in the world’s most polluted capital on Wednesday, the start of the Diwali festival.

New Delhi experiences suffocating smog every year around Diwali, when farmers in north India burn the stubble left behind after the harvest and revellers let off firecrackers. The onset of winter aggravates the problem as the cooler air traps the pollutants, a phenomenon known as inversion.

The Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Board, a statutory body, made the ruling as levels of PM2.5 pollutants in the air reached around 200 micrograms per cubic metre – eight times the World Health Organisation’s safe limit of 25.

Indian Hindu activists protest against a temporary ban on the sale of firecrackers during Dewali. The government has taken numerous steps to curb choking air pollution in the Indian capital of New Delhi. Photo: Agence France-Presse

“Difficult situations demand tough responses and solutions, and Delhi is faced with a really difficult situation each winter when air pollution levels spiral out of control,” said its chairman Bhure Lal in a statement.

The Board said the city’s Badarpur power plant, which has a capacity of around 700 megawatts, would be closed until March. The plant is due to shut down for good next July as India seeks to move away from heavily polluting fossil fuels.

It also banned the use of the privately owned diesel generators that many wealthier households rely on during India’s frequent power cuts.

The measures follow a temporary ban on the sale of firecrackers in Delhi, which was introduced earlier this month by the Supreme Court to ease the pollution levels.

India's top court has ordered a temporary ban on the sale of firecrackers in New Delhi ahead of the Diwali festival, which leaves the city shrouded in toxic smog every year. Photo: Agence France-Presse

Last year, levels of PM2.5 – the fine particles linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease – soared to 778 in the days that followed Diwali, prompting the Supreme Court to warn of a public health emergency.

Levels of PM2.5 between 301 and 500 are classified as “hazardous”, while anything over 500 is beyond the official index.

The Delhi government then shut schools for three days, banned all construction work for five days to curb dust levels and temporarily closed the Badarpur plant.

A 2014 World Health Organisation survey of more than 1,600 cities ranked Delhi as the most polluted.

India’s notoriously poor air quality causes over a million premature deaths every year, according to a joint report by two US-based health research institutes earlier this year.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: New Delhi shuts power plant ahead of festival
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