Aerosol pollution is expected to rise by five per cent in Jharkhand next year, which may lead to a drop in visibility levels and pose a host of health problems for its citizens, a study by a premier research organisation said.
Such pollution is likely to remain in the "highly vulnerable" red zone in the eastern state, it said.
The study found that emission from thermal power plants was the main contributor to high aerosol amounts comprising particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10), sea salt, dust, sulphate, black and organic carbon.
Rising aerosol pollution might aggravate asthma, lung and cardiovascular diseases. Children, women and elderly people might be the worst sufferers, Kolkata-based Bose Institute's associate professor of environmental sciences Dr Abhijit Chatterjee told PTI.
He also said, Aerosol pollution is expected to rise by five per cent, pushing the AOD level over 0.6 within the vulnerable (red) zone in 2023.
Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) is a quantitative estimate of the aerosol present in the atmosphere and it can be used as a proxy measurement of PM2.5.
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Stating that Jharkhand currently falls under the red category, which indicates "high vulnerability with AOD over 0.5", he said the long-term research was conducted by studying satellite-based data.
Chatterjee and PhD scholar Monami Dutta from the same institute conducted the research- A deep insight into state-level aerosol pollution in India.
The increase in AOD in Jharkhand might seem negligible but the state is in the red zone. A little increase in the count would make the eastern state extremely vulnerable in the future.
The AOD at zero indicates a clear sky with maximum visibility, while the aerosol optical depth at 1 refers to very hazy conditions.
AOD value less than 0.3 falls under the green zone (safe), while a count between 0.3 and 0.4 refers to the blue segment (less vulnerable) and 0.4-0.5 in the orange category (vulnerable), while over 0.5 is the highly vulnerable red zone, the study said.
Contribution of the thermal power plant (TPP) emission to aerosol pollution increased from 41 per cent in the 2005-2009 period to 49 per cent in 2015-2019. It is reflective of the increase in capacity of TPPs from 3,256 gigawatts (GW) to 7,531 GW in the period, Dutta, a senior research fellow at Bose Institute, explained.
For Jharkhand, solid fuel burning is the second highest source, although its share reduced from 18 to 15 per cent from 2005-2009 to 2015-2019, the study found.
Vehicular emission is the next biggest contributor to aerosol pollution in the state.
Number of vehicles might have increased but engines have improved, particularly after the introduction of the BS-6 standard. So, vehicular pollution has reduced, Dr Chattarjee said.
The study recommended that Jharkhand needs to achieve approximately 70-80 per cent reduction in TPP emission to reach a threshold AOD value of 0.4.
This would mean that the state requires to reduce less than 5 GW thermal power generation capacity in order to move from the red zone to the blue one, it suggested.
Asked about steps taken to reduce thermal power plant emission, Jharkhand State Pollution Control Board (JSPCB) chairman Sasikar Samanta said, A state-level task force was recently constituted, which will draft a strategy to reduce the emission and phase out the plants.
He also mentioned that PCB authorities have been monitoring the thermal power plants whether these units are following the pollution control guidelines and standard operating procedure.
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