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Delhi’s air quality returned to the ‘severe’ category Tuesday, though the contribution of farm fires to PM2.5 levels has fallen to around 8%, according to the SAFAR forecasting system. Going by NASA satellite data, the fire count in Punjab this year is the highest since 2016 and has recently surpassed the fire count from last year.
The cumulative fire count for Punjab till November 16 stood at 74,015, higher than the 72,373 recorded last year, as per data provided by Pawan Gupta, senior scientist, Earth Sciences at the Universities Space Research Association, NASA Marshall Space Flight Centre, USA. The data is from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS), an instrument onboard the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite.
Data from the same instrument indicates that the fire count over the past six years has been the highest in 2016 when 84,886 counts were recorded. This is now followed by the figure recorded this year. The counts fell to 46,752 in 2017, 51,998 in 2018, and 40,528 in 2019, before climbing back up again to over 72,000 in 2020.
The Central Pollution Control Board’s daily AQI bulletin provided an AQI of 403 for Delhi Tuesday with PM2.5 and PM10 as the main pollutants. This has worsened from an AQI of 353 Monday.
Fire counts have, however, been declining over the past few days. The ‘effective’ fire count from the SAFAR forecasting system on Tuesday had fallen to 1,820, down from 3,125 on Monday, and 3,445 on Sunday.
An update from the SAFAR system on Tuesday said that calm conditions and a low ventilation index are pushing the air quality into the ‘severe’ category. The ventilation index is usually determined by wind speed, humidity, temperature, and the extent to which pollutants can rise vertically and disperse. Wind speed and temperature are now low, trapping the pollutants within Delhi, said Gufran Beig, founder project director, SAFAR.
The SAFAR forecast for the next two days suggests that the intrusion of pollutants from stubble burning is unlikely over the next two days since the wind direction will be from the east of Delhi. But the air quality could stand between the ‘severe’ and the upper end of the ‘very poor’ category till November 18.
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