New Delhi: Saturday records the combustion count of the effective one-day effective barrier at 5,159.
The agricultural fire section to the PM2.5 Delhi pollution level also rose from 36% on Friday to 41% on Saturday, according to the air quality system and weather forecasting and research, the Ministry of Forecast forecasting.
Effective fire counts consist of the number of fires that can affect Delhi’s air.
Although the remaining harvest burning has reached its peak now, his cumulative share to PM2.5 Delhi has been lower this year than the previous two years.
Track the pollution level in your cityaccording with Safar data, the cumulative part of the burning stump in Delhi PM2.5 in 62 days of harvest season (10 October December) in 2019 was 9,821 micrograms per cubic meter, up to 10,067 micrograms of cubic meters in 2020 .
This year, because of the pending withdrawals from the rainy season and periodic rainfall in October, the section remains much lower.
Safar’s Gufran Beig said, “The stock stump burns into Delhi’s air varies every day according to the wind direction and wind speed.” For example, November 5, 2019 recorded the number of one-day fire highs at 5,300 but part of the fire in PM2.5 Delhi pollutants was only 10%.
On the same day a year earlier, there were fewer 2,190 agricultural fires, but their contribution to PM2.5 Delhi was taken into account at 58% due to the wind direction and favorable speed for transport pollutants.
According to data from the NASA satellite image, 30.52 agricultural fires were seen in Punjab between September 1 and November 5 this year compared to 48,412 in 2020, 30,665 in 2018 in the same period.
In Haryana, 6,051 incidents that burn stumps have been recorded between September 1 and November 5 this year while the number of agricultural fires is 4,000 in 2020, 4,937 in 2018 and 5,165 in the same period.
Pawan Gupta, Senior Scientist, Earth Sciences, University Space Research Association in NASA, said that around 6,000 agricultural fires were recorded in Punjab on Friday.
He told Tii, “the cumulative number of agricultural fires between September 1 and November 5 this year is lower compared to 2020, but close to numbers for 2018 and 2019.
It seems that many harvests are still left to burn and the number of fires is expected to be higher This week.
However, the number of fires will begin to decrease from next week.
“Chandra Bhushan, CEO, International Forum for the Environment, Sustainability and Technology (IFOREST), added,” Because the withdrawal of the rainy season is delayed from the region, we only now reach the peak Burning stumps in neighboring countries.
We cannot control the level of Delhi’s high pollution without dealing with agricultural fire problems in the environment.
Regardless of burning stumps, other forms of combustion biomass must also be intended to check air pollution.
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