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News > Science and Tech

Delhi Lung Sculpture Turn Sickly Brown in Days with Pollution

  • Vehicles drive through smog in New Delhi, India, November 8, 2018.

    Vehicles drive through smog in New Delhi, India, November 8, 2018. | Photo: Reuters

Published 13 November 2018
Opinion

On Tuesday, PM2.5 levels in the city touched 263, more than 10 times the recommended average of 25, according to the U.S. embassy in Delhi which independently monitors air pollution.

A pair of artificial lungs put up in New Delhi to demonstrate the lethal effects of smog have turned a sickly dark brown within 10 days of their installation, underscoring the city's pollution crisis.

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Delhi, the world's most polluted major city, has been covered in a toxic grey haze since the onset of winter last month, with pollution levels several times higher than the World Health Organization's safe limits.

The oversized lungs, put up on November 3 on the premises of the Sir Ganga Ram hospital and white at first, had been fitted with high-powered particle-trapping filters to mimic the way a human body functions.

"The most striking bit is the rapidity with which the lungs have turned black. It is absolutely frightening," said Arvind Kumar, a lung surgeon who has been campaigning to raise awareness about the dangers of air pollution.

As cooler air traps pollutants close to the ground, levels of PM2.5 — particles so tiny they can enter the lungs and bloodstream — have soared dangerously.

"There is no reason to believe that the same material is not getting deposited in our lungs as well," Kumar told AFP.

"The health consequences of this is going to be disastrous."

On Tuesday, PM2.5 levels in the city touched 263, more than 10 times the recommended average of 25, according to the U.S. embassy in Delhi which independently monitors air pollution. It had hit a peak of 369 at 11 am before a brief spell of rain brought some respite.

Last month, a senior government official warned in the conditions of anonymity that India’s capital was set for a “deadly cocktail” of pollution in coming weeks, blaming a “very poor” level across much of the city on a fall in temperature and lighter wind, as both seasonal changes allow pollution to accumulate.

Pollution levels also exacerbated as farmers in areas close to Delhi burn crop residue in preparation for new planting and people let off fireworks to mark the Hindu festival Diwali, which fell on Nov. 7.

Despite pressure from health experts, the government this year held off on a wholesale ban on fireworks and has faced criticism for failing to prevent farmers in states neighboring Delhi from burning stubble.

To curb pollution levels around Diwali, the country’s top court on Tuesday only allowed the use of “green” firecrackers, but it was unclear how the rule will be enforced or whether there was such a thing as an environmentally safe firework.

Despite a government plan to discourage the burning of crop residue by offering to pay up to 80 percent of the cost of certain farm equipment, many farmers are still burning their waste.

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