FROTH AND BUBBLE
India's smog-choked capital imposes driving restrictions
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) April 15, 2016


New Delhi on Friday imposed driving restrictions that will take around a million cars off its roads for the second time this year, seeking to improve air quality in the world's most polluted capital.

The Delhi government first introduced the experiment for two weeks in January as dangerous levels of haze choked the city and authorities said they were bringing it back for another 15 days by popular demand.

"Odd-even is back because the people of Delhi wanted it," the city's transport minister Gopal Rai said Friday, referring to the scheme that restricts cars to alternate days according to whether they carry odd or even-numbered licence plates.

"We have full faith that Delhi's people will follow this odd-even rule from today."

A 2014 World Health Organisation survey of more than 1,600 cities ranked Delhi as the most polluted, partly because of the nearly 10 million vehicles on its roads.

As the scheme got going early Friday, pollution reached a "very unhealthy" 191 on the US embassy's air quality index, meaning people with heart or respiratory problems, children and the elderly should stay indoors.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvin Kejriwal has said pollution levels fell after restrictions were imposed in January, but many scientists say the scheme is not enough to tackle the problem.

"It is exactly like taking out 10 buckets of water from the ocean, the magnitude of the pollution problem is such," said Gufran Beig, the chief scientist at India's state-run System of Air Quality Weather Forecasting and Research.

Delhi commuters have generally been positive about the trial but mostly because it frees up traffic on the city's usually clogged roads.

Women travelling alone or with young children and politicians, judges and police are all exempt, as are men taking their children to school.

Scores of traffic police and volunteers took to the streets to enforce the scheme, wearing smog masks and holding banners urging drivers to comply.

Most drivers appeared to be sticking to the rules Friday and many took to cycling as an alternative, making Delhi's usually-clogged roads flow relatively freely.

However, many offices and schools were shut Friday, a public holiday in India, and the true test of the scheme will be when they reopen on Monday.

.


Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
FROTH AND BUBBLE
Combined effects of copper and climate can be deadly for amphibians
Aiken SC (SPX) Apr 12, 2016
Researchers at the University of Georgia's Savannah River Ecology Laboratory warn that the extinction to two amphibian species - the southern toad and the southern leopard frog - may be hastened by the combined effects of climate change and copper-contaminated wetlands. Scott Weir, a postdoctoral researcher who led the study, said copper is naturally found in aquatic environments and, to s ... read more


FROTH AND BUBBLE
Bringing the landslide laboratory to remote regions

Crane collapse kills 18 in southern China: state media

Pakistan ends search for 23 people trapped by landslide

Czechs scrap programme to resettle Iraqi Christians

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Radical solution could avoid depletion of natural resources

Graphene is both transparent and opaque to radiation

Breaking metamaterial symmetry with reflected light

Catalyst could make production of key chemical more eco-friendly

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Video captures swarming red crabs

Will raindrops stick to a spider web's threads?

Nicaragua lawmakers dismiss attempt to block canal project

Monsoon forecast offers cheer to India's farmers

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Hungry penguins chase Antarctic's shifting krill

Six to 10 million years ago: Ice-free summers at the North Pole

Summer melt-driven streams on Greenland's ice sheet brought into focus

New cause of exceptional Greenland melt revealed

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Pinpointing the effects of fertilizer

EU parliament urges limited approval for weedkiller

Fertilizer's legacy: Taking a toll on land and water

AccorHotels to plant gardens, cut food waste

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Magnitude 6.9 quake hits northern Myanmar

Traffic chaos, schools shut as Riyadh hit by rare flooding

Death toll from South Asian quake rises to 6: officials

Powerful quake rocks South Asia, one dead

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Two Somalia drone strikes kill about 12 militants: US

Taiwan says Kenya police broke down jail walls to forcibly deport Taiwanese

Djibouti's Guelleh re-elected with landslide win

Primate populations suffer as a result of Congolese warfare

FROTH AND BUBBLE
The pyrophilic primate

Headdress study highlights ancient hunter-gatherer rituals

Humans likely delivered diseases to Neanderthals

Primate evolution in the fast lane