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Pollution Alert: IMA wants more monitoring stations and all polluted cities under clean air programme

The National President of Indian Medical Association Rajan Sharma has told to Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar that there should be an increase in the number of monitoring stations across India. In order to combat pollution, IMA has proposed to include all non-attainment cities in the National Clean Air Programme.

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Published : Feb 24, 2020, 5:59 PM IST

IMA wants more monitoring stations and all polluted cities under clean air programme
Indian Medical Association

New Delhi: Expressing grave concerns over the worsening air quality, the IMA has written to Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar, seeking inclusion of all non-attainment cities in the National Clean Air Programme and an increase in the number of monitoring stations across the country.

Non-attainment cities do not meet national ambient air quality standards and the government launched the NCAP, a time-bound national strategy to tackle increasing air pollution, in January 2019.

To Javadekar, the Indian Medical Association said clean air is the "principal prerequisite to sustain healthy lives of people" as air pollution has become the fifth largest cause for premature deaths globally.

The doctors' body said that according to studies number of premature deaths due to air pollution in India is "only a fraction less" than that of deaths due to smoking.

Read: Goa Guv lauds varsity women's excellence, asks men to compete

"Polluted air from being just an environmental issue has become massive health and economic crisis," it said in the letter. It said that the situation is equally alarming in Delhi as the month-wise PM10 analysis of data from Delhi Pollution Control Committee (Jan to Dec 2018), indicated PM10 values were 225 g/m3 much higher than the prescribed annual standard of 60 g/m3.

"We acknowledge that the ministry has launched the National Clean Air Programme in January 2019. The NCAP offers tentative targets of 20-30 per cent reduction of air pollution levels by 2024," the IMA said.

Rajan Sharma, the national president of IMA, said several studies have suggested that immediate measures at all levels are needed to curb pollution. "We, at IMA, would be glad if the ministry accepts our recommendation to increase monitoring stations and include all non-attainment cities under NCAP."

In 2017, IMA organised an international conference on combating air pollution. NGO Greenpeace India lauded IMA's crucial intervention in the fight against air pollution.

Read: SC disposes plea seeking independent audit of EVM, VVPAT, ETS sources codes

"It is very encouraging to see IMA writing to the minister and amplifying the demand for clean air. It's true, if we want to make NCAP truly a 'national programme', then we have to include all polluted cities into it and time-bound emission reduction targets need to be implemented," said Avinash Chanchal, senior campaigner at Greenpeace India.(PTI REPORT)

New Delhi: Expressing grave concerns over the worsening air quality, the IMA has written to Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar, seeking inclusion of all non-attainment cities in the National Clean Air Programme and an increase in the number of monitoring stations across the country.

Non-attainment cities do not meet national ambient air quality standards and the government launched the NCAP, a time-bound national strategy to tackle increasing air pollution, in January 2019.

To Javadekar, the Indian Medical Association said clean air is the "principal prerequisite to sustain healthy lives of people" as air pollution has become the fifth largest cause for premature deaths globally.

The doctors' body said that according to studies number of premature deaths due to air pollution in India is "only a fraction less" than that of deaths due to smoking.

Read: Goa Guv lauds varsity women's excellence, asks men to compete

"Polluted air from being just an environmental issue has become massive health and economic crisis," it said in the letter. It said that the situation is equally alarming in Delhi as the month-wise PM10 analysis of data from Delhi Pollution Control Committee (Jan to Dec 2018), indicated PM10 values were 225 g/m3 much higher than the prescribed annual standard of 60 g/m3.

"We acknowledge that the ministry has launched the National Clean Air Programme in January 2019. The NCAP offers tentative targets of 20-30 per cent reduction of air pollution levels by 2024," the IMA said.

Rajan Sharma, the national president of IMA, said several studies have suggested that immediate measures at all levels are needed to curb pollution. "We, at IMA, would be glad if the ministry accepts our recommendation to increase monitoring stations and include all non-attainment cities under NCAP."

In 2017, IMA organised an international conference on combating air pollution. NGO Greenpeace India lauded IMA's crucial intervention in the fight against air pollution.

Read: SC disposes plea seeking independent audit of EVM, VVPAT, ETS sources codes

"It is very encouraging to see IMA writing to the minister and amplifying the demand for clean air. It's true, if we want to make NCAP truly a 'national programme', then we have to include all polluted cities into it and time-bound emission reduction targets need to be implemented," said Avinash Chanchal, senior campaigner at Greenpeace India.(PTI REPORT)

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