General Studies Paper-3
Context: The Supreme Court questioned the effectiveness of the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) in controlling air pollution caused by stubble burning in North India.
Background
- Recently the air quality in Delhi slipped into the ‘poor’ category, signaling the imminent arrival of North India’s bad air season.
- The Supreme court criticized the CAQM for non-compliance with its mandate, saying the commission has vast powers, such as closing down polluting industries, but hasn’t fully used them.
- Also, no specific committee had been formed to address stubble burning, which is a major cause of pollution.
Reason for higher pollution level in winters
- Seasonal Impact: As the monsoon ends, weather conditions like temperature inversion (where warm air traps cooler air near the surface) prevent pollutants from dispersing, causing hazardous pollution levels.
- Sources of Pollution: Pollution in Delhi comes from many sources, such as:
- Biomass burning for cooking in rural areas.
- Trash burning and vehicular emissions in cities.
- Industrial pollution.
- Stubble burning in nearby states like Haryana and Punjab.
- Firecrackers during festivals like Diwali.
Concerns with the existing solutions
- Smog Towers: These structures reduce pollution only in a small area and require electricity, which might lead to more emissions.
- Water Guns: These have limited impact on overall air quality.
- Odd-Even Road Sharing: While it reduces traffic temporarily, the long-term effect is minimal.
- Cloud Seeding: This method uses chemicals, such as silver iodide, to create artificial rain, but it can have environmental risks.
- Water vapor that would naturally fall elsewhere is manipulated, which could cause droughts in other regions.
- Additionally, chemicals used can accumulate in soil and water, potentially harming ecosystems.
Way Ahead
- Better Coordination: Agencies responsible for transportation, industry, agriculture, and urban planning need to work together.
- The problem of stubble burning requires cooperation between farmers, policymakers, and regulators across state borders.
- Capacity Building: Policymakers, researchers, regulators, and industries should collaborate and critically evaluate solutions that are truly in the public interest.
- Comprehensive Air Quality Monitoring: While cities like Delhi get most of the attention, pollution is also a serious problem in rural and industrial areas. Air quality monitoring should cover all regions.
- Address root cause: Solutions like cloud seeding and smog towers serve as superficial actions. Real solutions need to address the root causes of pollution rather than offer temporary relief.
Concluding remarks
- The scale of the problem demands long-term solutions, but the response has often been characterized by short-term, optics-driven measures.
- India needs a multi-decadal, multi-sectoral effort grounded in scientific thinking and committed to sustained, collaborative action.