Green Media E-Newsletter is brought to you by CMS ENVIS Centre on Media & Environment

Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Delhi Pollution: The Lessons India Can Learn From China
Correspondent :
As air quality in Delhi remains a major issue and chief ministers of the three states Punjab, Haryana and Delhi play politics over Twitter, its alarming how India has failed to take concrete steps to reduce air pollution in the country’s capital. Even more alarming when the Union Minister for Environment Harsh Vardhan was found downplaying the impact of pollution when he reportedly said, “No death certificate has the cause of death as pollution.”

What Delhi is living through right now, is the same situation that China’s Beijing has experienced in the past. But it appears the country has taken some concrete steps to get cleaner air though the results are not immediately visible.

Exposure to excessive PM 2.5 in the four major cities of Shanghai, Guangzhou, Xi’an and Beijing resulted in about 8,572 premature deaths and economic losses of $1.08 bn in the year 2012, according to a joint study by Greenpeace East Asia and Peking University’s School of Public Health.

The battle to improve Beijing’s air quality began in the run-up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics when China had no choice but to take drastic steps as the issue of severe pollution levels was in the international spotlight and it concerned the health of athletes.

Since then China took several measures to clean the air especially in cities like Beijing which was worse affected by toxic smog, especially during winter. One of the biggest reforms was the Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Air Pollution implemented in September 2013. Under the plan, China planned to reduce PM 2.5 levels in the air by over 10% from 2012 to 2017.

For Beijing, the target set was to reduce PM 2.5 levels by around 30% to 60 μg/m3 in 2017 from 89.5 μg/m3 in 2013. By 2016 it reduced to 73 μg/m3. The annual average set by WHO of PM 2.5 level stands at 35 μg/m3.

PM 2.5 are particulate matter upto the size of 2.5 micrometers found in the air. These particles can easily enter the lungs and blood stream through inhalation increasing the risks of cardiovascular and respiratory diseases and cancer

 
SOURCE : https://www.boomlive.in/delhi-pollution-the-lessons-india-can-learn-from-china/
Back to pevious page

Advertise with Green Media

Be a part of this successful campaign and advertise your events, seminars, conferences, festivals or services, job requirements etc. "GREEN MEDIA" - unique E-newsletter DAILY reaches to more than 3000 environmentalists, wildlife experts, activists, filmmakers and media professionals. For Advertisement contact: cmsenvis@cmsindia.org

Print Media Trends and Analysis: CoP 11/MoP 6



Assessment of Using Social Media to Raise environmental Awareness

Trends in the coverage of environment by news channels



 



The Hindu | Times of India | The Pioneer | The Statesman | The Tribune | Hindustan Time | Sahara Times | Business Lines | Business Standard |

  Economic Times| Financial Express | The Asian Age | Indian Express | The Telegraph | Deccan Herald | The Assam Tribune | The Sentinel  

 

 

 

 

Supported by: ENVIS Secretariat,Ministry of Environment, Forests & Climate Change, GOI.

    

Copyright © 2014 Centre for Media Studies. For Limited Circulation

 

 
Since India has no anti-spamming law, we follow the US directive passed in Bill.1618 Title III by the 105th US Congress, which states that mail cannot be considered spam if it contains contact information, which this mail does. If you want to be removed from the mailing list click on UNSUBSCRIBE