EARTH OBSERVATION
Toxic haze chokes Indian capital
Toxic haze chokes Indian capital
by AFP Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) Oct 20, 2025
India's capital New Delhi was shrouded in a thick, toxic haze on Monday as air pollution levels soared to more than 16 times the World Health Organization's recommended daily maximum.

New Delhi and its sprawling metropolitan region -- home to more than 30 million people -- are regularly ranked among the world's most polluted capitals, with acrid smog blanketing the skyline each winter.

Cooler air traps pollutants close to the ground, creating a deadly mix of emissions from crop burning, factories and heavy traffic.

But pollution has also spiked due to days of fireworks set off to mark Diwali, the major Hindu festival of lights, which culminates on Monday night.

The Supreme Court relaxed this month a blanket ban on fireworks over Diwali to allow the use of the less-polluting "green firecrackers" -- designed to emit fewer particulates.

The ban was widely ignored in past years.

On Monday, levels of PM2.5 -- cancer-causing microparticles small enough to enter the bloodstream -- hit 248 micrograms per cubic metre in parts of the city, according to monitoring organisation IQAir.

The government's Commission of Air Quality Management said air quality is expected to further deteriorate in the coming days.

It also implemented a set of measures to curb pollution levels, including asking authorities to ensure uninterrupted power supply to reduce the use of diesel generators.

City authorities have also said they will trial cloud seeding by aeroplanes for the first time over Delhi this month, the practice of firing salt or other chemicals into clouds to induce rain to clear the air.

"We've already got everything we need to do the cloud seeding", Delhi Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa told reporters this month, saying flight trials and pilot training had been completed.

A study in The Lancet Planetary Health last year estimated 3.8 million deaths in India between 2009 and 2019 were linked to air pollution.

The UN children's agency warns that polluted air puts children at heightened risk of acute respiratory infections.

Related Links
Earth Observation News - Suppiliers, Technology and Application

Tweet

EARTH OBSERVATION
South Asia monsoon: climate change's dangerous impact on lifeline rains
New Delhi (AFP) Sept 26, 2025
South Asia's annual monsoon rains sustain more than a billion people, but climate change is making them increasingly erratic and deadly, with poor infrastructure only exacerbating the impact. Farming, water supplies and hydropower across much of South Asia rely on the seasonal rains, but research shows climate change is causing longer dry spells punctuated by bursts of extreme rain. - What is the monsoon? - Derived from the Arabic "mausim", or season, the monsoon is a reversal of winds drive ... read more

EARTH OBSERVATION
Russian strikes hit Ukraine gas facilities, sparking outages

Not nothing, not enough: is the Paris Agreement working?

Russian attack batters Ukraine energy grid, kills 7-year-old

'Cynical' Russian attack batters Ukraine energy grid, kills 7-year-old

EARTH OBSERVATION
World's largest superconducting fusion system will use American technology to measure the plasma within

Compact fusion boom propels PLD REBCO tape production while spotlighting cost and stability hurdles

Soil microbe mineral battery stores sunlight to degrade antibiotics after dark

Physics informed AI forecasts safer tokamak rampdowns for future fusion plants

EARTH OBSERVATION
Danish wind giant Orsted to cut workforce by a quarter

French-German duo wins mega offshore wind energy project

Wind giant Orsted to resume US project after court win

Floating wind power sets sail in Japan's energy shift

EARTH OBSERVATION
Next-generation LEDs and solar cells powered by new spinel-type sulfide semiconductor

Perovskite triple-junction solar cells move closer to ultra-high efficiency

Self-regulating silver nanorings enable power-free smart windows

Liquid metal templating boosts printable perovskite solar cell efficiency

EARTH OBSERVATION
Boron isotopes unlock secrets of nuclear waste glass corrosion

Poisson model solved opening path to stronger materials better groundwater management and safer nuclear waste storage

Ukrainian nuclear plant to be repaired 'soon': watchdog

Artificial plant device cleans radioactive soil using only sunlight

EARTH OBSERVATION
Helping farmers, boosting biofuels

Brazil, other nations agree to quadruple sustainable fuels

Solar leaf converts CO2 and water into formate for cleaner chemical manufacturing

Carmakers seek EU emissions ban rethink with biofuel push

EARTH OBSERVATION
Black gold, green promises: Brazil's climate paradox

Maritime sector to decide on plan to cut emissions opposed by US

Senate to take up bipartisan bill to prevent war with Venezuela

Most public land already open to energy production; Trump wants more

EARTH OBSERVATION
'Good riddance': Fed clash over scrapping climate risk guidance

Climate advisers warn UK to prepare for 2C warming by 2050

Judge 'reluctantly' tosses youth case challenging Trump climate policies

Nearly 900 mn poor people exposed to climate shocks, UN warns