In the last few years, air pollution has gained civic and political traction. Yet, on the ground, things seem to remain the same. No effective solution has been found to curb stubble-burning, even as other sources of pollution remain high. Cost of such negligence and apathy on public health and economy is significant. Researchers, including those from Mumbai’s International Institute for Population Sciences, examined PM2.5 pollution levels across 700+ districts. They found that air pollution exceeding national standards increases the risk of death across all ages, by 86% in newborns, 100-120% in under-5 kids, and 13% in adults.
How we equip our pollution-mitigation agencies has a direct bearing to how we value our own people. How many more scientific reports do we need to drive home the point that air pollution is killing people? Central and state governments must realise that this fight can’t be won by working in silos. Or without trained personnel and funds.