India's capital announces permanent anti-pollution curbs for toxic winter months


FILE PHOTO: Traffic moves along a highway amidst air pollution in New Delhi, India, December 18, 2025. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo

NEW DELHI, ⁠July 2 (Reuters) - The government of India's national capital territory ⁠of Delhi has announced a spate of measures to ‌curb air pollution during winter, months ahead of the annual season when the city often becomes the world's most polluted.

• Government data from the last ​three years indicates that Delhi's air quality ⁠deteriorates from November 1 ⁠to February 15, when the average air quality index (AQI) generally ranges ⁠from ‌312 to 342. An AQI of 0-50 is considered to be "good".

• Authorities earlier imposed anti-pollution measures during ⁠this period according to a graded action plan ​when air quality ‌dropped below a certain level.

• Under the new curbs announced ⁠on Wednesday, ​they will now be in place continuously from November 1 to February 28, irrespective of AQI.

• These include doubling of parking charges ⁠to discourage use of private vehicles, staggered ​timings at all government offices, and a ban on all outdoor civil construction activity except essential public infrastructure projects.

• Between November ⁠1 and January 31, all government and private offices will also be mandated to operate with half their staff physically present and the rest working from home.

• Violators will face penal ​action, including prosecution, the announcement said.

• The ⁠government this week also announced a cash incentive of over $1,000 to ​car owners willing to scrap their ‌old vehicles for EVs as part ​of a new policy aimed at reducing pollution.

(Reporting by Sakshi Dayal; Editing by YP Rajesh and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

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