Updated
Nov 06, 2024, 01:15 PM
Published
Nov 06, 2024, 12:42 PM
LAHORE - Pakistan’s Punjab set up a “smog war room” to tackle severe pollution, officials said, as poor air quality in Lahore pushed the capital of the eastern province to the top of the rankings as the world’s most polluted city.
Live rankings by Swiss group IQAir gave the city a pollution index score of 1165, followed by the Indian capital of New Delhi with 299.
“The war room committee will review weather and air quality forecasts... daily and monitor the performance and actions of field officers,” said Mr Sajid Bashir, a spokesman for the province’s environment department.
Officials told Reuters it brings together staff from eight departments, with a single person charged with overseeing tasks from controlling burning of farm waste to managing traffic.
Twice daily sessions will analyse data and forecasts to brief stakeholders on efforts to fight pollution, and issue daily advisories, they added.
But the index score on Nov 6 for Lahore fell short of last week’s unprecedented score of 1900, which had exceeded recommended levels by more than 120 times, prompting closure of primary schools and orders to work from home.
At the time, Punjab’s Senior Minister Marriyum Aurangzeb blamed the toxic air on pollution drifting across the border with India just 25km away. Northern areas of the neighbouring nation are also battling severe pollution.
The Punjab government would ask Pakistan’s foreign office to take up the matter with India’s foreign ministry, she told the Indian Express newspaper in an interview published on Nov 6.
South Asia is shrouded in intense pollution every winter as cold air traps emissions, dust, and smoke from farm fires, while pollution could cut more than five years from people's life expectancy in the region, a study found in 2023.
On Nov 5, the environment minister of New Delhi, which is rated the world’s most polluted capital for four successive years by IQAir, said officials were looking to artificial rain to fight the problem in 2024. REUTERS