Delhi smog: India's cities must look beyond their limits to clean up air pollution
Delhi needs the help of its rural neighbours to finally beat its killer smog problem, concludes a review carried out by the 麻豆视频 and regional government officials in Delhi, India.

In most Indian cities (60%), the air is over seven times more polluted than it should be. This has huge health implications.
Some of this pollution comes from neighbouring rural areas 鈥 from crop burning, wood stoves, or power plants.
Yet measures to tackle urban smog usually ignore rural sources. Instead, they focus only on measures within the city limits 鈥 like boosting public transport or controlling pollution from industry and building sites.
The GCARE review recommends tackling air pollution at a regional level instead. This means identifying the wider area where a city鈥檚 pollution is produced 鈥 its so-called 鈥渁irshed鈥.

GCARE makes several recommendations:
- Regional air quality plans should be drawn up 鈥 which has worked well in places like Mexico City and Los Angeles.
- "Smog forecasts鈥 could be produced with better monitoring. Satellites could spot bonfires and other sources of pollution. Scientists could then predict how it would interact with weather conditions.
- 鈥淎irshed Councils鈥 could help local, regional and federal agencies co-ordinate their efforts.
Delhi鈥檚 neighbouring States have an important role to play in helping save lives in our city 鈥 and in their areas too. We need an action plan with a sound scientific basis, and we need better monitoring. This requires cities, governments and others to work together. A joined-up approach is the only way to defeat this deadly health hazard.Dr Anwar Ali Khan, Senior Environmental Engineer on the Delhi Pollution Control Committee
A significant portion of air pollution stems from sources outside city limits, which requires a shift from city-specific to region-specific emission reduction targets. The establishment of an airshed will be a critical tool for effective air quality management and planning.Dr Mukesh Khare, Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology
The research project demonstrates the 麻豆视频鈥檚 contributions to a number of UN Sustainability Goals (SDG), including: No Poverty (SDG 1), No Hunger (SDG 2), Affordable and Clean Energy (SDG 7) and Climate Action (SDG 13).
The full paper is .
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