Monitoring stations of Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC), Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), and the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology recorded suspended particulate matters multiple times above the safe limits.
A Western disturbance, active over North India, is keeping moisture levels high and wind speed calm, thereby aggravating the situation as pollutants are not getting dispersed, Anumita Roychowdhury of Centre for Science and Environment explained.
But Delhi government, which is comparing the prevailing data with 2014 figures during the same period, maintained that there was a "definitive declining trend" in the levels of Particulate Matter (PM 2.5), the tiniest and deadliest of all the microscopic particles.
Real time data of several DPCC stations had PM 2.5 and PM 10 above 300 and 800 micrograms per cubic metre respectively. SAFAR's hourly average graph remained above the 'severe' threshold through the day.
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In 13 of the 20 locations where a mobile monitoring van collected samples yesterday, PM 2.5 level was recorded at less than 300, "which proves reduction in comparison to previous years at the same time by at least 100 units", the government said.
Roychowdhury, who heads the clean air project of CSE said, 67 per cent of the days in December had PM 2.5 in the worst category, meaning 'severe', as per the National Air Quality Index.
"The levels not only crossed 250 micrograms per cubic metre but went beyond that. Measures like odd-even are meant to pull down the peak levels," she said.