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New Delhi: A 10-member task force on the Graded Response Action Plan on Thursday recommended that construction activities in Delhi and satellite towns be banned between 6 pm and 6 am from October 26 to October 30.
The Supreme Court-mandated Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority will take a call on the recommendation on Friday.
During a meeting, the task force headed by Central Pollution Control Board member secretary Prashant Gargava also recommended closing coal-based industries, barring power plants, in satellite towns of Faridabad, Gurugram, Ghaziabad, Noida, Greater Noida, Sonepat, and Bahadurgarh during the period.
“In Delhi, industries which have not yet shifted to piped natural gas to remain closed from October 26 to 30,” the task force suggested.
It also asked all implementing agencies to take strict action to check stubble burning in Punjab and Haryana, and ensure enforcement of the Supreme Court’s directions regarding firecrackers and impound “visibly” polluting vehicles.
“Hot mix plants, stone crushers and construction activities, such as earthwork, which have potential to generate dust to be banned between 6 pm and 6 am from October 26 to 30 in Delhi and satellite towns namely Gurugram, Faridabad, Noida, Greater Noida, Ghaziabad, Sonepat, and Bahadurgarh,” it recommended.
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The task force also suggested the traffic police of Delhi and adjacent NCR towns to deploy additional manpower to ensure the smooth movement of vehicles in all areas, especially the identified high-traffic corridors in the national capital. “Visibly polluting vehicles should be impounded,” it said.
The task force also suggested that the district administrations of Delhi-NCR ensure zero tolerance towards the operation of illegal industries and the use of unauthorised fuel.
At the meeting convened to review the air quality situation in view of Diwali, stubble burning and changing weather, V.K. Soni, a scientist at the India Meteorological Department, said wind speed and direction will fluctuate.
“Easterly winds are expected to turn northwesterly from October 27. On October 28, fog is also expected,” he said.
The CPCB member-secretary emphasized that the next few days will be challenging and in addition to intense actions by implementing agencies, additional preventive measures may be required to check the deterioration of air quality.
Days before Diwali, the city’s air quality plunged to a ‘very poor’ category on Thursday, after fluctuating between ‘moderate’ and ‘poor’ for six days, due to unfavourable wind speed. The overall air quality index stood at 318 and entered the severe category in Mundka (418).