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'12% population in polluted Korba industrial area highly vulnerable to COVID-19'

Chhattisgarh Minister Jai Singh Aggarwal wrote to Industries Minister Kawasi Lakhma requesting him to instruct officials in his department to take immediate steps to control industrial emissions. He said that the Korba industrial area is extremely polluted and people there are more vulnerable for novel coronavirus.

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Published : Apr 10, 2020, 4:37 PM IST

New Delhi: Chhattisgarh Minister Jai Singh Aggarwal on Friday flagged that around 12 per cent of the population in the Korba industrial area in the state suffer from asthma and bronchitis due to extreme pollution and are highly vulnerable to infections like COVID-19.

The state minister for disaster management in a letter to his colleague and Industries Minister Kawasi Lakhma said that the novel coronavirus disease can have a major impact on the population suffering from asthma and bronchitis in the industrial area.

Korba is extremely polluted due to open-cast coal mines and coal-fired plants, he said.

The State Health Resource Centre (SHRC), Chhattisgarh, has in its report said that around 12 per cent of the population in the Korba industrial area spread over 11 kilometres is suffering from asthma and bronchitis. These people are highly vulnerable to the threat of coronavirus, Aggarwal wrote.

He has requested Lakhma to instruct officials in his department to take immediate steps to control emissions.

The health impact assessment should be made mandatory like environmental impact assessment before industries are set up, Aggarwal suggested.

Prabir Chatterjee, former director, SHRC Chhattisgarh, said it is encouraging to see that the minister has taken notice of the report.

We too will encourage other cabinet ministers to take up this cause and begin health impact assessments in the interest of the common man, displaced and tribal communities whom they represent, he said.

Aarti Khosla, Director at Climate Trends, a Delhi-based strategic communications body that specialises in building narratives around climate change, said, Predisposition to ill health, for example, respiratory conditions like asthma, which are prevalent in industrial areas which are thermal power clusters like Korba, lead to reduced lung function.

While scientific studies can reveal exact correlation, it is only obvious that poor lung capacity makes such people a high-risk group for infections like coronavirus, she said.

The findings from the health study show a significantly elevated prevalence of respiratory diseases among the exposed population in Korba, the power capital of Chhattisgarh with 10 coal-fired power plants.

Korba also has the world's second-largest open cast coal mines, Gevra, and other major open cast coal mines such as Kusmunda and Dipka.

The most common cause of pollution in the locality are the emissions from thermal power plants; dumping of fly ash and ash slurry; outflow of coolant water into river impacting the flora, fauna and fish and groundwater contamination because of coal storage yards and ash ponds.

PTI Report

Also Read: COVID-19: Chhattisgarh fights coronavirus with these preparations and resources

New Delhi: Chhattisgarh Minister Jai Singh Aggarwal on Friday flagged that around 12 per cent of the population in the Korba industrial area in the state suffer from asthma and bronchitis due to extreme pollution and are highly vulnerable to infections like COVID-19.

The state minister for disaster management in a letter to his colleague and Industries Minister Kawasi Lakhma said that the novel coronavirus disease can have a major impact on the population suffering from asthma and bronchitis in the industrial area.

Korba is extremely polluted due to open-cast coal mines and coal-fired plants, he said.

The State Health Resource Centre (SHRC), Chhattisgarh, has in its report said that around 12 per cent of the population in the Korba industrial area spread over 11 kilometres is suffering from asthma and bronchitis. These people are highly vulnerable to the threat of coronavirus, Aggarwal wrote.

He has requested Lakhma to instruct officials in his department to take immediate steps to control emissions.

The health impact assessment should be made mandatory like environmental impact assessment before industries are set up, Aggarwal suggested.

Prabir Chatterjee, former director, SHRC Chhattisgarh, said it is encouraging to see that the minister has taken notice of the report.

We too will encourage other cabinet ministers to take up this cause and begin health impact assessments in the interest of the common man, displaced and tribal communities whom they represent, he said.

Aarti Khosla, Director at Climate Trends, a Delhi-based strategic communications body that specialises in building narratives around climate change, said, Predisposition to ill health, for example, respiratory conditions like asthma, which are prevalent in industrial areas which are thermal power clusters like Korba, lead to reduced lung function.

While scientific studies can reveal exact correlation, it is only obvious that poor lung capacity makes such people a high-risk group for infections like coronavirus, she said.

The findings from the health study show a significantly elevated prevalence of respiratory diseases among the exposed population in Korba, the power capital of Chhattisgarh with 10 coal-fired power plants.

Korba also has the world's second-largest open cast coal mines, Gevra, and other major open cast coal mines such as Kusmunda and Dipka.

The most common cause of pollution in the locality are the emissions from thermal power plants; dumping of fly ash and ash slurry; outflow of coolant water into river impacting the flora, fauna and fish and groundwater contamination because of coal storage yards and ash ponds.

PTI Report

Also Read: COVID-19: Chhattisgarh fights coronavirus with these preparations and resources

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