Indian court allows firecrackers despite pollution

Air pollution in New Delhi is at dangerous levels, but firecrackers will be allowed for the Diwali festival.

Morning haze envelops the skyline on the outskirts of New Delhi.

Morning haze envelops the skyline on the outskirts of New Delhi. Source: AAP

India's top court on Tuesday eased a ban on fireworks for a major Hindu festival despite air pollution in New Delhi and other cities again reaching danger levels.

The Supreme Court, which last year banned firecrackers for the Diwali festival, rejected a new call for a ban in the capital amid growing concern over pollution.
Firecrackers set off for the Hindu festival of lights add to the toxic mix created by farmers burning crop stubble, diesel engines, coal-fired power plants and industrial emissions.

The World Health Organisation in May listed 14 Indian cities, including Delhi, in the world's top 15 with the dirtiest air.

Ahead of Diwali on November 7, the Supreme Court ordered that only reduced smoke fireworks - so-called "green firecrackers" - could be sold and that this must be through licensed traders. No fireworks can be sold online, it said.
Indian people commute on motorcycles and cars through heavy dust and smog in New Delhi.
Indian people commute on motorcycles and cars through heavy dust and smog in New Delhi. Source: AAP
The court has also set a two hour window from 8:00pm to 10:00pm for the lighting of crackers on Diwali.

"It needs to be enforced strictly," Gopal Sankarnarayan, a lawyer for the petitioners, told NDTV television.

Last year, the Supreme Court suspended the licences of all firecracker sellers in Delhi for one month because of the pollution crisis which leaves the Indian capital's 20 million residents gasping for clean air during the winter months.

However, many ignored the ban and purchased crackers illegally or brought out old stocks.

Every winter, air pollution in Delhi soars as cooler air traps harmful particles from the various emissions.

Smog has climbed in recent weeks as temperatures have fallen and smoke from burning wheat fields in neighbouring states has reached the capital, mingling with urban pollutants. 

The US embassy website Tuesday showed levels of the smallest and most harmful airborne pollutants reached 164 at midday - more than six times the WHO safe maximum.

Coal-fired power station closed

The city administration last week closed its biggest coal-fired power plant in a bid to improve air quality.

But another coal plant is proposed for Khurja, just outside Delhi, posing similar health risks for millions in the Indian capital, critics say.

In a report published Tuesday, the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis recommended the Khurja proposal be scrapped.

"Delhi already has the dubious reputation of having the worst air pollution of any city in the world," the institute's Tim Buckley said in a statement.

"If the Khurja coal plant is built as planned near Delhi, this will increase the impact on local residents, emergency workers and the local government."


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3 min read
Published 23 October 2018 8:06pm
Source: AFP, SBS

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