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Five things to know about Delhi's toxic smog![]() India court demands Delhi anti-smog plan in two days New Delhi (AFP) Nov 8, 2016 - India's top court on Tuesday gave the federal government two days to chalk out a plan to tackle alarming levels of smog in Delhi, the world's most polluted capital. An environmental body filed a petition with the Supreme Court earlier this week demanding a review of the government's previous lacklustre attempts to control the pollution levels, describing it as a "public health emergency". Delhi has been shrouded in a toxic soup in recent days as pollution levels spiked after the Diwali festival which is marked by setting off ear-splitting -- and highly polluting -- fireworks. The air quality generally worsens with the onset of winter, as farmers in neighbouring states burn crop stubble after the harvest and cooler temperatures trap pollutants in a smoggy haze over the city. The government on Tuesday asked the court for two days to come up with a plan, which was granted. "Give me two days. We will have a meeting with the environment secretary and come up with a comprehensive response to the problem of Delhi pollution," India's solicitor general, Ranjit Kumar, told the court. On Tuesday morning, the US embassy showed the concentration of PM2.5 -- the fine particles linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease -- at a "hazardous" level of 372, lower than Monday's off-the-charts reading of 778. Levels between 301 and 500 are classified as "hazardous", meaning everyone faces a risk of respiratory effects and should stay indoors, while levels above 500 are beyond the official index. In a separate hearing in India's environment court on Tuesday, Judge Swantanter Kumar slammed authorities of Delhi and four of its neighbouring states for not taking action sooner to control alarming levels of pollution. "What did you do when all this smog was going on and the particulate matter reached beyond prescribed limits?" Kumar said, according to the Press Trust of India news agency. Delhi authorities have so far responded to the smog by including a ban on setting off fire crackers -- except at religious events -- and driving restrictions earlier this year. The Delhi government on Monday also shut schools for three days, banned all construction work for five days and temporarily closed a coal-fired power plant. Authorities are also considering cloud-seeding to produce rain, a technique Beijing used to clear the air before the 2008 Olympic Games.
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India's top court Tuesday gave authorities two days to devise a plan to tackle choking levels of smog in Delhi which have prompted warnings of a health "emergency" in the world's most polluted capital.
On Tuesday, the concentration of PM2.5 -- the fine particles linked to higher rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease -- was at 372, a level considered "hazardous" by US embassy measures but down from Monday.
Here are five things to know about Delhi's smog problem:
What causes hazardous levels of smog?
New Delhi's air quality usually worsens with the onset of winter, particularly after the Diwali festival when millions of revellers let off heavily polluting firecrackers and cooler temperatures trap those pollutants.
The capital is also affected by dusty winds from the arid west, the burning of crop stubble in farms around the city and smoke from fires used in poorer neighbourhoods for heating and cooking.
A 2014 World Health Organization survey of more than 1,600 cities ranked Delhi as the most polluted.
Why is it getting worse?
Delhi's population continues to grow rapidly as tens of thousands of migrants arrive in the capital each year.
Dust-generating construction sites, industrial emissions as well as a dominance of coal-fired power plants all contribute to the increasingly noxious air.
Car sales have also soared as incomes rise with nearly 10 million vehicles jostling for space on Delhi's roads, adding to smog left behind by thousands of diesel-guzzling trucks that rumble across the capital every night.
What's being done to tackle it?
Authorities in Delhi on Monday closed schools for three days, banned all construction work for five days and temporarily closed a coal-fired power plant near the capital.
It also banned fire crackers, but said they would be allowed at religious events -- though not at weddings.
Authorities are also considering cloud-seeding to produce rain, a technique Beijing used to clear the air ahead of the 2008 Olympic Games.
Last year a higher levy on diesel trucks was brought in, while temporary driving restrictions were introduced in January that took around a million cars off the roads for two weeks.
Last month, the city government also announced plans to install air purifiers and a mist-making device at major intersections to curb choking pollution.
But the Delhi government is powerless to stop the burning of crop stubble in the nearby states of Haryana and Punjab, which takes place at the end of each harvest.
What's the economic impact?
Between five and 10 percent of workers in the capital have called in sick over the last week with respiratory problems, according to a survey published Monday by Indian business body ASSOCHAM.
ASSOCHAM also warned that persistently poor air quality could hit tourism.
"Environment and air pollution related issues might hurt brand India," said ASSOCHAM's general secretary, D.S. Rawat.
A study by the World Bank in 2013 said air pollution and other environmental degradation costs India $80 billion per year, about 5.7 percent of GDP.
Why does it matter?
Health advisories warn of "serious risk" of respiratory problems for residents of Delhi and say all outdoor physical activity should be avoided.
People with heart or lung disease, older adults and children should stay indoors and keep activity levels low.
According to an American study published in February, air pollution kills more than 5.5 million people around the world each year, with over half of those deaths occurring in fast-growing China and India.
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