
Rain, winds give Delhi best AQI since Sept 29
New Delhi: Rain accompanied by gusty winds helped Delhiites inhale the purest air they had access to in 261 days. The city's AQI on Wednesday was 81 and 'satisfactory', with the index lower than this only on Sept 29 last year at 76.
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This year so far, Delhi has witnessed just three 'satisfactory' days and there has been no 'good' air day. The last 'good' air day was Sept 10, 2023, when the AQI read 45 due to rains and the restrictions imposed for the G20 Summit. The Central Pollution Control Board defines a 'good' air day as one when AQI is below 51, while a 'satisfactory' level has AQI reading 51-100. The city's AQI was 104 on Tuesday.
Delhi logged 29mm of rainfall in the last 24 hours till 8.30am on Wednesday.
The rain was accompanied by winds with speed up to 45 kmph. These aided in settling the pollutants.
Experts said on Wednesday that pollution has to be dealt at the source level to ensure similar AQI readings throughout the year. "Weather and climate will always impact daily short-term trends. But irrespective of this variation and climatic influence, we need to achieve sustained longer-term reduction with scale and speed of clean air action," said Anumita Roychowdhury, executive director (research and advocacy), Centre for Science and Environment.
Sunil Dahiya, founder and lead analyst, EnviroCatalysts, said, "The fact that sustained rain and good wind speed could bring AQI down to the 'satisfactory' level says loudly that emissions from contributing sectors, transport, industry, construction, and waste, etc., are so high that even the wind and rain washing the pollutants couldn't provide breathable 'good' air quality."
Dahiya added that while the slightly better air quality was a respite for the citizens, aggressive actions towards reducing emission load from contributing sectors were the only solutions that can help reduce pollution throughout the year.
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In March, the city enjoyed two consecutive 'satisfactory' air days on March 15 and 16 with AQI, respectively, of 85 and 99. CPCB's data shows that between Jan 1 and June 17, Delhi recorded 80 'moderate' days, 68 'poor' days and 18 'very poor' days. In the same period last year, there were 84 'moderate' days, 49 'poor' days, 32 'very poor' days and three 'severe' days. CPCB classifies AQI between 101 and 200 as 'moderate', between 201 and 300 as 'poor', between 301 and 400 as 'very poor' and over 400 as 'severe'.
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