In pictures: Air pollution in Delhi 9 times over acceptable limit
winters
Representative photo: The cold wave sweeping Kashmir.
(Photograph:PTI)
Air pollution
The reasons are numerous and include the burning of leftover crop stubble by farmers in north India and colder temperatures which cause something called 'lateral inversion'. The cold prevents air from rising, thereby trapping pollutants closer to the grounds.
(Photograph:PTI)
Air pollution
After a relatively cleaner Sunday — the result of higher wind speeds which pushed pollutants out of the city — pollution in Delhi rose sharply on Monday. Doctors have said breathing in Delhi's air is akin to a 'death sentence' for people with lung and respiratory disease. The sale of face masks obviously shoots up.
(Photograph:PTI)
Air pollution
At 10 am on Monday morning, AQI or air quality index levels were recorded at over 900 (Anand Vihar) at at least one spot in Delhi. Anything over 300 falls in the hazardous category. An AQI of over 900 is over nine times the acceptable (100) limit (The AQI at Anand Vihar however down to 388 by 1 pm. 10 am remember is peak traffic time.)
(Photograph:PTI)
;Air pollution
This though is just beginning of the cold season. By the time, late December and early January come around, Delhi begins to look like something out of a movie set in a dystopic future.
(Photograph:Reuters)
Air pollution
File photo: A car (right) and a man (left) are seen near a red light near Rashtrapati Bhavan.
(Photograph:Reuters)
Air pollution
File photo: Three girls play under a flyover in Delhi on a winter evening.