World Health Organisation study finds Indian capital had dirtiest atmosphere of 1,600 cities around the world for PM2.5 particles

This article is more than 6 years old

This article is more than 6 years old

India's state air monitoring centre has admitted that pollution in Delhi is comparable to that of Beijing, but disputed a World Health Organisation (WHO) finding that the Indian capital had the dirtiest atmosphere in the world.

A study of 1,600 cities across 91 countries released on Wednesday by the WHO showed Delhi had the world's highest annual average concentration of small airborne particles (known as PM2.5) of 153.

These extremely fine particles of less than 2.5 micrometres in diameter are linked with increased rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease as they penetrate deep into the lungs and can pass into the bloodstream.

Indian officials in the past have bristled at research showing the capital as being worse than Beijing where thick smog has triggered public health warnings and public concern that are mostly absent in Delhi.

"If we compare yearly averages for each year from 2011-2014 then both cities [Delhi and Beijing] are almost comparable," Gufran Beig from India's state-run System of Air Quality Weather Forecasting and Research (SAFAR) acknowledged in an email sent to AFP.

He disputed the figure cited by the WHO for PM2.5 in Delhi, however, saying it should have been in the range of 110-120 micrograms per cubic metre instead of 153.

Beijing's was underestimated at 56, he said, and should have been double this, according to an analysis of readings given out by the US embassy in the city.

"Delhi's air quality is better than Beijing in summer and much better in monsoon season," he added. "It is winter pollution in Delhi and sudden spikes – which is quite high as compared to Beijing – triggered by meteorology."

Beig maintained that the WHO figures contained in a searchable database released on Wednesday were biased and misleading.

But even with an annual average PM2.5 reading of 110-120, Delhi would still be among the world's most polluted cities, if not the outright worst.

Rivals would be the Pakistani city of Karachi with an annual reading of 117, while the regional Indian cities of Gwalior, Patna and Raipur reported 144, 149 and 134 respectively.

By comparison, London had an annual PM2.5 reading of 16.

"The latest urban air-quality database released by the World Health Organisation reconfirms that most Indian cities are becoming death traps because of very high air pollution levels," said an Indian campaign group, the Centre for Science and Environment.

The centre said that 13 of the 20 most polluted cities in the world were in India.

The small particles blighting the air of Delhi and other leading developing cities around the world are often dust from construction sites, pollution from diesel engines or industrial emissions.

The Indian capital also suffers from atmospheric dust blown in from the deserts of the western state of Rajasthan, as well as pollution from open fires lit by the urban poor to keep warm in winter or to cook food.

While Delhi ranked as worst on the PM2.5 scale in the WTO data, measurements of larger PM10 particles showed others as far more polluted.

Peshawar and Rawalpindi in neighbouring Pakistan trumped all other cities with readings of 540 and 448 respectively. WHO says concentrations of PM10 particles should remain below 20 micrograms per cubic metre, averaged out over the year.

Delhi has had its air quality under scrutiny for some time now with research by Yale University scientists in January this year also suggesting that it was worse than Beijing.

A World Bank report last year that surveyed 132 countries ranked India 126th for environmental performance and worst for air pollution.

The WHO stressed that its new air pollution database, which relies mainly on data gathered by the cities themselves, did not aim to rank cities, pointing out that "some of the worst ones ... are not collecting data regularly."