Jammu air quality turns SEVERE

By JV Team

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Living here in Jammu, how easily do we ignore the air pollution menace of Delhi. We have come to consider Jammu immune to a similar fate. Here are some facts to dispel your misconceptions:

According to sources from State Pollution Control Board, deadly air pollutants in Jammu are already higher than the permissible limits.

The ambient air quality is measured at three places in Jammu – Narwal, Bari Brahmana (industrial), and MAM Stadium, and the data from these stations shows that air pollution is constantly hitting dangerous levels in the region.Pollution Jammu

Even on better air quality days, the pollutant levels are higher than levels considered safe. The local people seem to be unaware of the air quality index in their city.

For instance, on 19th October 2017, RSPM (Respirable Suspended Particulate Matter), one of the deadliest pollutants, shot to 290.4 micrograms per cubic metre (mpcm), in MAM Stadium area – which is more than double the permissible limit of 100. On 23rd May 2018, RSPM hit another high of 378 mpcm in Narwal.

On the same day in MAM Stadium area, SPM (Suspended Particulate Matter) was recorded at 448 mpcm on 19th October 2017, against the permissible limit of 200. Refusing to come down, it was recorded at its highest till date, 456 mpcm, on 23rd May 2018, in Narwal.

The tiny air pollutants like RSPM and PM 10, in a matter of seconds, enter in our blood and can cause severe damage to lungs and other organs, in some cases, leading to death.

National Green Tribunal (NGT), in October 2018, had asked the State Government to prepare an action plan within two months to bring air quality indices within the prescribed limits, since it did not meet the National Ambient Air Quality Standards notified under the National Clean Air Programme (NCAP).

The State Pollution Control Board is obliged to upload the air quality status regularly on its website. While the yardsticks used by the abovementioned websites for monitoring air quality might be doubtful, the state does not have a real-time air quality monitoring system.

Read also: Industries polluting water bodies in Samba

The alarming levels of air pollution in Jammu were pointed out by a World Health Organisation (WHO) report few months ago, which was rejected by the State and Union Government.

Jammu is a small city, on its way to become a smart city, teeming with buildings, industries, vehicles and people. The air, here, is polluted mostly by vehicular exhaust, industrial emissions, construction material, and various other factors which largely go unchecked. It is high time that the State Government and people of Jammu realize the seriousness of the issue and come forward to curb air pollution before it worsens.

[With inputs from online reports]