Sunday, November 23, 2025
15.1 C
New Delhi

Delhi-NCR Air Chokes Into ‘Severe’ Category 3 Days After Diwali; GRAP 2 In Effect

Three days after Diwali celebrations, Delhi continues to battle hazardous air pollution, with the city’s Air Quality Index (AQI) firmly in the ‘very poor’ range. On Thursday morning, the average AQI across the capital stood at 325, with several neighborhoods experiencing severely unsafe conditions.

Delhi Air Quality Index (AQI) 

The pollution spike has worsened throughout the week. Wednesday’s 24-hour average AQI hit 353—the highest of the season—up from 351 on Tuesday and 345 on Monday, according to data from the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB). Thick smog and low visibility were reported in areas like Akshardham temple, highlighting the severity of the post-festival air crisis.

Anand Vihar emerged as the most polluted area, registering an AQI of 429 on Thursday morning, up sharply from 360 the previous day. Other badly affected localities include ITO (353), RK Puram (362), Dwarka Sector 8 (327), Ashok Vihar (350), Bawana (346), Nehru Nagar (377), and Patparganj (361), all categorized as “very poor”, as per reports.

Experts point to multiple contributing factors: Diwali firecracker residue, stubble burning in neighbouring states, vehicular emissions, and stagnant weather conditions. Weak winds, under 7 kmph, have limited the dispersion of pollutants. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has warned that air quality is unlikely to improve in the coming days due to persistent atmospheric stagnation.

Poor Air Quality: Health Concerns On Rise 

Health professionals are urging residents to exercise caution. Dr Nikhil Modi, a respiratory medicine specialist at Apollo Hospitals, explained, “As winter approaches every year, we see the AQI start to rise because as the air cools, the wind speed decreases and cold air does not rise because of which pollution accumulates on the low level. Before Diwali, we started seeing that the AQI was rising and after Diwali, it was expected that the AQI will rise. As soon as the pollution increases, people with allergies, lung problems will face issues like difficluty in breathing, coughing, watery eyes and other symptoms. Patients have started coming right after the next day of Diwali.”

In response, Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta announced that the government is exploring artificial rain as a pollution-control measure, pending favourable weather conditions from the IMD. Plans are also underway to expand cleaner transport options, including deploying 10,000 electric buses across the city by 2027.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Freight At Full Throttle: Indian Railways Smashes 1-Billion-Tonne Barrier

This milestone solidifies the Indian Railways’ position as a powerful catalyst for both economic and environmental progress Go to Source Read More

Andhra CM Naidu Projects India As World’s No. 1 Economy By 2047, Calls For Telugu Leadership

The chief minister linked this grand national goal directly to technological advancement and human capital, detailing his state’s strategy to contribute to India’s rise Go to Source Read More

Topics

Freight At Full Throttle: Indian Railways Smashes 1-Billion-Tonne Barrier

This milestone solidifies the Indian Railways’ position as a powerful catalyst for both economic and environmental progress Go to Source Read More

Andhra CM Naidu Projects India As World’s No. 1 Economy By 2047, Calls For Telugu Leadership

The chief minister linked this grand national goal directly to technological advancement and human capital, detailing his state’s strategy to contribute to India’s rise Go to Source Read More

Congress rally to protest ‘vote chori’ on December 14

NEW DELHI: Continuing its attack on BJP and Election Commission through the “vote chori campaign”, Congress general secretary, organisation, KC Venugopal on Saturday said the party would be holding a ‘maha rally Read More

UN climate talks fail to secure new fossil fuel promises

7 minutes ago ShareSave Georgina RannardClimate and science correspondent, Belém, Brazil ShareSave EPA Following bitter rows, the UN climate summit COP30 in Belém, Brazil has ended with a deal that contains no direct reference to the Read More

Related Articles