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Home / Environment / Delhi's Pollution: Beyond Visible Smog to Invisible Chemistry

Delhi's Pollution: Beyond Visible Smog to Invisible Chemistry

20 Jan

•

Summary

  • Secondary particulate matter forms in the atmosphere from precursor gases.
  • Ammonium sulphate and nitrate near a third of Delhi's PM2.5.
  • Past successes in Los Angeles, London, Beijing show similar pollution challenges.
Delhi's Pollution: Beyond Visible Smog to Invisible Chemistry

The battle against severe pollution days in Delhi is entering a more complex phase, moving beyond visible, directly emitted pollutants to those formed invisibly in the atmosphere. Early successes in controlling PM10 and PM2.5 through measures like public transport conversion to CNG and tighter fuel standards have plateaued.

Scientists now understand that a substantial share of PM2.5 is secondary particulate matter, created when gases like sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and ammonia react. Studies indicate these secondary inorganic aerosols account for close to a third of Delhi's annual PM2.5, a figure that rises significantly during winter smog.

This invisible pollution poses a challenge for public perception and existing action plans, which were designed for primary emitters. Addressing it requires a non-linear approach, targeting precursor gases through broader, earlier, and more intensive policy interventions.

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Global examples from Los Angeles, London, and Beijing demonstrate that overcoming such plateaus involves coordinating reductions of precursor gases like NOx and VOCs, and often requires regional cooperation and sustained effort.

Delhi NCR faces unique challenges due to its large population and near-landlocked airshed. Effective strategies must include treating secondary particulate matter as a core objective, sequencing precursor controls NCR-wide, and considering particle size in policy.

Future efforts must also address airshed-wide coordination, and ensure equity by linking precursor control with housing improvements and clean energy access. Emergency response systems should evolve to predictive action. The goal is not immediate eradication but consistent reduction of pollution levels and exposure.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Secondary particulate matter forms in the atmosphere when precursor gases like sulphur dioxide and ammonia react.
Current plans target directly emitted pollution; they struggle with invisible, atmospherically formed secondary pollutants.
These cities faced similar challenges with secondary pollution, requiring broader coordination and sustained effort on precursor gases.

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