Low visibility: A man running in front of India Gate on a smoggy morning in New Delhi. — Reuters
The country’s efforts to combat air pollution by using cloud seeding in its sprawling capital, New Delhi, appear to have fallen flat, with scientists and activists questioning the effectiveness of the move.
Cloud seeding involves spraying particles such as silver iodide and salt into clouds from aircraft to trigger rain that can wash pollutants from the air.
Delhi authorities, working with the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur, began trials last week using a Cessna aircraft over parts of the city.
But officials said the first trials produced very little rainfall because of thin cloud cover.
“This will never ever do the job; it’s an illusion,” said Bhavreen Kandhari, an environmental campaigner in Delhi. “Only when we clean up sources of air pollution can we control it.”
The government has spent around US$364,000 (RM1.52mil) on the trials, according to local media reports.
Each winter, thick smog chokes Delhi and its 30 million residents. The cold air traps emissions from farm fires, factories and vehicles.
Despite various interventions – such as vehicle restrictions, smog-sucking towers, and mist-spraying trucks – the air quality ranks among the worst for a capital in the world.
A day after the latest trial, levels of cancer-causing PM2.5 particles hit 323, more than 20 times the daily limits set by the World Health Organization. It will likely worsen further through the season.
A study published in The Lancet Planetary Health last year estimated that 3.8 million deaths in India between 2009 and 2019 were linked to air pollution.
There are also concerns regarding the long-term effects of the chemicals that were sprayed.
Virendra Sachdeva, from Delhi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said it was too early to dismiss the cloud seeding experiment as a “scientific failure”.
“It is a part of the research process, and success is not always achieved in the first attempt,” he said.
However, two atmospheric scientists at IIT Delhi called the cloud seeding plan “another gimmick”.
“It is a textbook case of science misapplied and ethics ignored,” Shahzad Gani and Krishna Achutarao wrote in The Hindu.
Mohan George, from the Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment, said artificial rain was not the answer.
“The levels of pollution will come back almost immediately as rain stops,” the scientist said. — AFP
