Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumDelhi Residents Choking On Air Pollution: Winter Smog 40X WHO Safe Levels
Naresh Kumar Rana's day begins early. Every morning, he leaves his home at 6.30 a.m. and will drive across the vast Indian capital of Delhi for the next 10 hours. Rana, 42, is an auto rickshaw driver. The three-wheeled taxicabs, with their distinctive green and yellow livery, are a common sight on the streets of Delhi, where they provide a cheap and ready available means of transport on the city's heavily congested roads.
The job provides Rana with a steady income to help support his family, but it comes with a risk -- especially during winter -- when the city's already toxic air becomes even more lethal. On Thursday morning, the day after Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights that is celebrated with fireworks, parts of the capital reported levels almost 40 times those considered "safe" by the World Health Organization. "I have trouble breathing. By the time I return home, I have chest pain, I'm coughing," Rana, who has been a auto rickshaw driver for 24 years, told CNN of his experience driving during the winter smog.
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Air quality measurements provided by air quality monitoring stations track smog levels across the city in real time. The past week has seen air quality in the city plunge. On Thursday, the air quality index reached levels of 999 in some parts of Delhi, the highest reading available before levels go "off-the-charts."
Those levels are based on the concentration of fine particle matter, known as PM2.5, per cubic meter. The microscopic particles, which are smaller than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, are considered particularly harmful because they are small enough to lodge deep into the lungs and pass into other organs, causing serious health risks. The World Health Organization considers a PM2.5 density below 25 micrograms to be safe.
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https://www.cnn.com/2018/11/07/asia/delhi-auto-rickshaw-pollution-intl/
sandensea
(21,602 posts)God help them.
defacto7
(13,485 posts)sandensea
(21,602 posts)Remember Octopussy? Its population has almost doubled since then.