03 November,2019 07:21 AM IST | New Delhi | Agencies
People cover their faces with masks in Delhi. Pic/PTI
New Delhi: The severe air pollution causing health emergency in Delhi that has grabbed international headlines, may dissipate by Sunday as favourable weather conditions are forecast that may cause a slow recovery in its air quality index (AQI). The toxic haze covering Delhi's skies is that for three weeks stagnant conditions caused by the delayed withdrawal of the monsoon had caused a deterioration due to accumulation of pollutants. This impact is ending now, according to Safar India (System of Air Quality and Weather Forecasting And Research), under the Ministry of Earth Sciences and Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune.
While AQI in Delhi is in the severe plus category, the highest grade of computation at 435, the US Embassy was denoting a sharp improvement in PM 2.5 levels compared to the peak values on Friday of 454. On Saturday, the PM 2.5 count at 9 am had halved at 208, according to US Embassy data.
A director and three engineers were among 34 people arrested on Saturday from sites of five real estate groups in Noida and Greater Noida for allegedly violating the ban on construction activities imposed in Delhi-NCR over an alarming spike in pollution, officials said. The crackdown on violators came a day after the Environment Pollution Authority, a panel mandated by the SC, declared a "public health emergency" in the Delhi-NCR and banned construction activity till November 5 in the region.
ALSO READ
Police arrest cook accused of killing 65-year-old south Delhi businessman
Delhi: 3 held for accepting bribes from hospital guards to renew contracts
AAP slams BJP over Delhi's Prashant Vihar blast, calls out Centre for law and order failure
Eknath Shinde meets Amit Shah in Delhi ahead of Mahayuti meeting
ED team attacked in Delhi during raids in cyber crime case, one detained
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose visit to Delhi coincided with the worst spells of pollution in the region, said the pollution presented a good argument for replacing buses run on diesel with those powered by electricity. "We will earmark Euros 200 million to reform the bus sector in Tamil Nadu. Whoever has looked at pollution would find good arguments to replace diesel buses with electric ones," she said.
Catch up on all the latest Crime, National, International and Hatke news here. Also download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever