***
The sun, a bright circle on a grey
background, can’t cast a shadow.
Air pollution so thick, worse than Beijing at its worst,
worse than the South East Asian fires. You can’t see through it, but you can
smell it, you can taste it, let it burn your throat, sting your eyes.
Smog season is here, the worst ever.
***
Just a few
days earlier:
The week ending October 25, air pollution levels in Delhi were
the lowest I've experienced – the PM2.5 AQI (air quality index) measure
was below 50 on consecutive days. By global standards, anything below 50 is considered ‘good’ (ie. not going to
do you any measurable harm).
***
On October 26, smog smothered Delhi. And stayed. Locked on and comfortable like a
predator straddling a subdued prey.
***
Jeff Smith and a friend from NASA use satellite imagery to show how smoke from crop
burning, in Punjab and areas to the northwest of Delhi, rolled over the city that day.
if the light poles are 20m apart .... |
The crop smoke sent the AQI spinning up as high as 800
overnights, and kept it up around 500 for large parts of the day (dropping to around 200 some early afternoons). At levels above 300, health authorities
advise against any kind of outside activity. It’s hard to see more than a few hundred
metres. We’re wearing masks and still our eyes and throats hurt.
***
Despite the heavy paws of smog, on
October 30, millions of enthusiastic participants in Hindi firecracker night (‘Diwali’)
unleashed a barrage of light, noise, and smoke and smoke and smoke.
In a city the size of Delhi, the rolling thunder of tens of millions of fireworks is punctuated by the crack and fizz and light show of those nearer by. And
the smoke spills, swirls, unfurls.
By one am, as the noise abated, measures of AQI
reached 1500. Unbelievable, off-the-charts, too high for accurate readings, varying wildly between machines struggling with
measurements beyond their range. The US embassy's machine measures above 999 but the embassy does not show these results, nor give credence to
measures above 500.
The level dropped with daylight, but only into the high
hundreds, before shooting up again, night after night, astonishingly high,
an unprecedented order of magnitude.
Bizarrely, many Indians take pride in the pollution they create with their fireworks, as if this confirms their
faith, their power, their pleasure.
***
***
Why is the smog so bad in Delhi? Apart from the crop fires
and the firecrackers, Delhi’s air is already infiltrated with smog from under-
and un-regulated trucks, buses and cars using inefficient fuels inefficiently,
with smoke from garbage fires and heating, with smog from coal-fired power
stations, industry and hundreds of small-scale brickworks.
Then multiply by adverse landform and climate conditions. Smog leaches
into the city’s environs from surrounding areas, and remains. Delhi lies in the middle of a vast, flat plain, hundreds of kilometres wide,
mountain ranges on most sides. Well over a thousand kilometres from either coast, Delhi rises only 200 metres above sea level. Smog has little incentive or
avenue to dissipate.
At this time of year, with daily temperatures dropping
towards winter, the cool air rolling off the Himalayas creates a temperature
inversion trapping polluted air close to the ground, but not a wind that might
blow that air away. Nor rain to flush the pollution from it.
***
Courts and governments belatedly issue short
term responses to the Airpocalypse, from the sensible to the stupid, treating only
the symptom but not the disease. A coal-fired power station adjacent to Delhi will
close for a few days. A ban on construction work is largely ignored. Water is sprinkled
and roadsides vacuumed to reduce dust in the air. Diesel generators may not be
operated. Fires are banned. And children must stay home from school.
Environmental organisations say these measures are a step in the right direction, but insufficient.
Even if bans were enacted, India’s institutions are
probably incapable or uninterested in enforcing them. A swathe of existing legislation
could be brought to bear on polluters, but is not.
The steamroller of public outrage, the kind of mass movement
that motivates manipulative and Machiavellian politicians of the Indian ilk,
has not and will not eventuate. And if not this year, when?
A year ago I wrote
of the air emergency, and likened Indians to the clichéd frogs in a pan of water
over the fire, unconcerned by gradually rising pollution. If this year,
when the pollution hit boiling point overnight, they still don’t leap from the pot, then when?
***
Soon, the new pollution will be the new normal, bringing
with it new levels of respiratory illnesses and cancers, a deadly season lining
its wake with tens of thousands of corpses, and a generation of children with
lungs worse than chainsmokers'. And the frog will continue to swim in
circles. And short-termism will overrule long term cost and consequence.
***
In the car, I removed the car air filter I earlier installed
and replaced it with a filter intended for a small room, adapted to run from the
car’s 12V power.
In the last few weeks, we’ve spent $500 on an
array of personal air filtration masks.
bicycle delivery men, in the air, on the road, all day, every day |
But until the air improves, drops into the 2-300
AQI range that suggests the air is merely ‘very unhealthy’ (as opposed to ‘hazardous’), outside activity is just not happening. No
tennis, no football, no walks, no cups of tea on the verandah.
That’s us. For tens of millions of Indians, life goes on as normal, smog or no
smog.
***
Meteorological experts are suggesting a change in the weather
for Wednesday: the wind will pick up and dissipate the worst of the Airpocalypse.
Leaving smog levels more typical of this time of year, oscillating between ‘unhealthy’ and ‘hazardous’. That's something to look forward to...
____________________________________
That sounds truly terrible. Our boy Jake developed asthma just from the pollution in the inner west of Sydney! I hope you guys don't suffer any long term damage. Rick, hold your breath till you come back to Aus.
ReplyDeleteShit, Rick that's a shocking tale you tell. It's in the news here but your graphic descriptions make it real. You poor things hope you come through unscathed.
ReplyDelete