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NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court told authorities on Monday to shut offices in the capital and nearby cities, allowing millions to work from home as officials seek ways to reduce hazardous air pollution that led to the closure of schools.
The Supreme Court pulled up the Delhi government and accused it of making “lame excuses” for not taking emergency measures to reduce the toxic smog engulfing the region.
Its action came after city authorities in New Delhi, which has been battling a toxic haze since early November, took emergency measures on Saturday, ordering the closure of schools and building work for four days.
A bench comprising Chief Justice of India NV Ramana, Justice DY Chandrachud and Justice Surya Kant ordered the prime minister’s Narendra Modi-led central government to hold an emergency meeting on Tuesday.
“We direct the centre and states of the national capital region to impose work from home for the meantime,” said Chief Justice N.V. Ramana, head of a panel of three judges considering a petition by a city resident.
The court also sought urgent steps to rein in crop waste fires in the neighbouring states of Haryana, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh, set by hundreds of thousands of farmers looking to clear fields for a new sowing season. “We want action on the issue,” said Justice Surya Kant. Although the court did not set a deadline for the action by authorities, it will next take up the pollution issue on Wednesday.
READ MORE: New Delhi shuts schools as pollution ’emergency’ looms
The government should take necessary steps such as shutting down non-essential construction transport, power plants and implementing working-from-home to tackle the crisis, the court said.
India’s efforts to reduce the burning of crop waste, a major source of air pollution during winter, have had little benefit, despite its expenditure of billions of rupees over the past four years. An index of air quality stood at 343 on a scale of 500 in Delhi on Monday, a sign of “very poor” conditions that can cause respiratory illness on prolonged exposure.
The capital experienced severe conditions late last week as temperatures dropped and the index reached 499. The Supreme Court also ordered measures to halt vehicle traffic that is not essential, cut industrial pollution and limit dust.
Contributors to the poor air quality in Delhi, often ranked the world’s most polluted capital, include coal-fired plants outside the city as well as the burning of garbage in the open.
Delhi had attempted to impose a total ban on the sale and purchase of fireworks ahead of Diwali — when celebrations of the Hindu festival of lights see the capital’s air pollution reach its peak levels. But reports from Diwali celebrations in Delhi showed widespread violations of the ban, as fireworks continued to explode throughout the night of 4 November and for several days after.