๐จ Chapter 05 ยท Topic 01 ยท Environmental Pollution
Air Pollution โ Pollutants, AQI, Smog & Acid Rain
Primary & secondary pollutants, PM2.5, PM10, AQI categories, photochemical smog, acid rain, sources and control measures โ complete UPSC & PSC notes.
๐จ What is Air Pollution?
Air pollution is the presence of harmful substances (solid, liquid, or gaseous) in the atmosphere in concentrations that are injurious to human health, animals, plants, and property. It is one of the leading environmental health risks globally.
๐ Key Fact: According to WHO, air pollution causes approximately 7 million premature deaths per year globally. India has 14 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities (IQAir 2023). Delhi is frequently ranked as the most polluted capital city in the world.
๐จ Primary vs Secondary Pollutants
| Type | Definition | Examples | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary Pollutants | Directly emitted into the atmosphere from identifiable sources | CO, SOโ, NOโ, PM2.5, PM10, lead, hydrocarbons | Vehicles, industries, power plants, biomass burning |
| Secondary Pollutants | Not directly emitted; formed in the atmosphere by chemical reactions between primary pollutants | Ground-level ozone (Oโ), PAN, smog, acid rain, secondary PM2.5 | Formed from NOโ + VOCs + sunlight; SOโ + water vapour |
โญ Exam Tip: Ground-level ozone is a secondary pollutant (harmful). Stratospheric ozone is beneficial (protects from UV). This distinction is frequently tested. PAN (Peroxyacetyl Nitrate) is also a secondary pollutant โ causes eye irritation and damages plants.
๐จ Key Air Pollutants โ Detailed
Particulate Matter (PM)
- PM2.5 โ particles with aerodynamic diameter <2.5 micrometres; most dangerous; can penetrate deep into lungs (alveoli) and enter the bloodstream; causes respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, cancer
- PM10 โ particles with diameter <10 micrometres; causes respiratory problems; filtered by nose and throat to some extent
- Sources of PM: vehicle exhaust, construction dust, industrial emissions, crop stubble burning, road dust, coal combustion
- Secondary PM2.5 โ formed in atmosphere from SOโ, NOโ, and ammonia reactions; major contributor to Delhi’s winter pollution
Carbon Monoxide (CO)
- Colourless, odourless gas โ makes it especially dangerous (no warning)
- Produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels, biomass, and tobacco
- Binds with haemoglobin to form carboxyhaemoglobin (COHb) โ 200โ250ร greater affinity than oxygen
- Reduces oxygen-carrying capacity of blood โ oxygen deprivation in tissues
- Symptoms: headache, dizziness, confusion; at high concentrations โ death
- Major source: vehicle exhaust (especially petrol engines)
Sulphur Dioxide (SOโ)
- Produced by burning coal and oil (especially in thermal power plants) and smelting of metal ores
- Causes acid rain when it reacts with water vapour โ HโSOโ (sulphuric acid)
- Respiratory irritant โ causes bronchitis, asthma; damages lung tissue
- Damages vegetation โ bleaches leaves, reduces photosynthesis
- India’s thermal power plants are the largest source of SOโ emissions
Nitrogen Oxides (NOโ)
- Includes NO and NOโ; produced by high-temperature combustion (vehicles, power plants)
- NOโ is a reddish-brown gas with pungent smell; causes respiratory problems
- Contributes to acid rain (forms HNOโ) and photochemical smog
- Reacts with VOCs in sunlight to form ground-level ozone
Lead (Pb)
- Previously a major pollutant from leaded petrol โ India phased out leaded petrol in 2000
- Still emitted from battery manufacturing, smelting, paint
- Causes neurological damage, especially in children (affects brain development)
- Bioaccumulates in bones and soft tissues
VOCs (Volatile Organic Compounds)
- Organic chemicals that evaporate easily at room temperature
- Sources: paints, solvents, vehicle exhaust, petroleum products, dry cleaning
- React with NOโ in sunlight to form ground-level ozone and photochemical smog
- Some VOCs (benzene, formaldehyde) are carcinogenic
๐ซ๏ธ Smog
Smog = smoke + fog. A mixture of air pollutants that reduces visibility and causes health problems. Two main types:
| Feature | Classical / London Smog | Photochemical / LA Smog |
|---|---|---|
| Main pollutants | SOโ + smoke + fog | NOโ + VOCs + sunlight โ Oโ + PAN |
| Type | Reducing smog | Oxidising smog |
| Conditions | Cold, humid, winter mornings | Warm, sunny, low humidity |
| Colour | Grey/black | Brownish/yellowish |
| Health effects | Respiratory problems, bronchitis | Eye irritation, chest pain, asthma |
| Famous incident | London Great Smog (1952) โ 4,000+ deaths | Los Angeles smog (1940s onwards) |
| India relevance | Delhi winter smog has elements of both | Photochemical smog in Indian cities |
๐ PAN (Peroxyacetyl Nitrate): A secondary pollutant formed in photochemical smog. It is a powerful eye irritant and damages plants by bleaching leaves. It is also a greenhouse gas. PAN is more toxic than ozone at low concentrations.
๐ง๏ธ Acid Rain
- Caused by SOโ and NOโ reacting with water vapour in the atmosphere to form HโSOโ (sulphuric acid) and HNOโ (nitric acid)
- Normal rain pH = 5.6 (slightly acidic due to dissolved COโ); acid rain pH < 5.6
- Can travel hundreds of kilometres from the source โ a transboundary pollution problem
Effects of Acid Rain
| Target | Effect |
|---|---|
| Forests | Damages leaves, leaches nutrients from soil, kills trees (especially conifers) |
| Lakes & rivers | Acidifies water bodies; kills fish and aquatic life; “dead lakes” |
| Buildings & monuments | Marble cancer โ dissolves CaCOโ in marble; damages Taj Mahal, Colosseum |
| Crops | Reduces crop yield; damages leaves |
| Soil | Leaches essential nutrients (Ca, Mg); releases toxic aluminium |
| Human health | Indirect โ through contaminated water and food |
โญ Taj Mahal & Acid Rain: The Taj Mahal in Agra is being damaged by acid rain and air pollution from nearby industries (especially Mathura refinery). The Supreme Court has set up a Taj Trapezium Zone (TTZ) โ a 10,400 sq km area around the Taj where polluting industries are restricted. The M.C. Mehta vs Union of India case (1996) led to relocation of industries from the TTZ.
๐ Air Quality Index (AQI)
AQI is a standardised index used to communicate air quality to the public. India’s AQI is based on 8 pollutants: PM2.5, PM10, NOโ, SOโ, CO, Oโ, NHโ, and Pb.
| AQI Range | Category | Colour | Health Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0โ50 | Good | Green | Minimal impact |
| 51โ100 | Satisfactory | Light Green | Minor breathing discomfort for sensitive people |
| 101โ200 | Moderate | Yellow | Breathing discomfort for asthma patients, elderly, children |
| 201โ300 | Poor | Orange | Breathing discomfort for most people on prolonged exposure |
| 301โ400 | Very Poor | Red | Respiratory illness on prolonged exposure |
| 401โ500 | Severe | Dark Red/Maroon | Affects healthy people; serious risk for sensitive groups; emergency conditions |
๐ CPCB & AQI Monitoring: CPCB (Central Pollution Control Board) monitors AQI at 240+ stations across India through the CAAQMS (Continuous Ambient Air Quality Monitoring Stations) network. Real-time data is available on the SAMEER app and AQI India website.
๐ญ Sources of Air Pollution in India
| Source | Key Pollutants | Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Vehicles (transport) | CO, NOโ, PM, VOCs, lead | Major source in urban areas; ~30% of PM2.5 in Delhi |
| Thermal power plants | SOโ, NOโ, PM, mercury | Largest source of SOโ in India |
| Industries | SOโ, NOโ, PM, heavy metals, VOCs | Varies by industry type |
| Crop stubble burning | PM2.5, CO, black carbon | Major cause of Delhi’s winter pollution (OctโNov) |
| Construction | PM10, PM2.5 (dust) | Significant in rapidly urbanising cities |
| Biomass burning | PM2.5, CO, black carbon | Cooking, heating in rural areas |
| Waste burning | Dioxins, furans, PM, CO | Open burning of municipal solid waste |
๐ก๏ธ Temperature Inversion
- Normally, temperature decreases with altitude โ warm air rises, carrying pollutants upward and dispersing them
- Temperature inversion โ a layer of warm air traps cold air (and pollutants) near the ground
- Prevents vertical mixing of air โ pollutants accumulate near the surface
- Common in winter mornings in Delhi and other cities โ worsens smog episodes
- Also called thermal inversion or atmospheric inversion
๐ก๏ธ Air Pollution Control Measures
Regulatory Measures
- Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act 1981 โ sets air quality standards; empowers CPCB and SPCBs
- Environment Protection Act 1986 โ umbrella legislation; sets emission standards for industries
- BS-VI (Bharat Stage VI) emission norms โ implemented from April 2020; equivalent to Euro-6; drastically reduced vehicle emissions
- National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) โ set by CPCB; define permissible concentrations of pollutants
Government Programmes
- National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) 2019 โ target 40% reduction in PM2.5 and PM10 by 2026; covers 131 non-attainment cities
- FAME India (Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of Electric Vehicles) โ promotes EVs to reduce vehicle emissions
- PM UJJWALA Yojana โ LPG connections to BPL households; reduces indoor air pollution from biomass cooking
- PUSA Bio-Decomposer โ microbial solution to decompose crop stubble in-situ; reduces stubble burning
- Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) โ emergency measures for Delhi-NCR based on AQI levels
Technical Measures
- Electrostatic Precipitators (ESP) โ remove particulate matter from industrial flue gases
- Scrubbers โ remove SOโ and other gases from industrial emissions using water/chemical spray
- Catalytic converters โ in vehicles; convert CO, NOโ, and hydrocarbons to COโ, Nโ, and water
- Flue Gas Desulphurisation (FGD) โ removes SOโ from power plant emissions
- Transition to renewable energy โ reduces dependence on coal; reduces SOโ and PM emissions
โญ BS-VI Fuel: India leapfrogged from BS-IV to BS-VI (skipping BS-V) in April 2020. BS-VI fuel has sulphur content of only 10 ppm (compared to 50 ppm in BS-IV). This significantly reduces SOโ, PM, and NOโ emissions from vehicles. India is one of the few countries to implement such stringent emission norms.
๐ Indoor Air Pollution
- Indoor air can be 2โ5ร more polluted than outdoor air
- Sources: cooking on biomass/coal stoves, tobacco smoke, building materials (asbestos, formaldehyde), cleaning products, radon gas from soil
- Key pollutants: CO, PM2.5, VOCs, radon, asbestos fibres
- Causes ~4 million deaths per year globally (WHO)
- Major problem in rural India โ women and children most affected by cooking smoke
- PM UJJWALA Yojana โ provides LPG to BPL households; reduces indoor air pollution
โ Revision Checklist โ Air Pollution
โ
Primary pollutants = directly emitted (CO, SOโ, NOโ, PM, lead, VOCs)
โ Secondary pollutants = formed in atmosphere (ozone, PAN, smog, acid rain, secondary PM2.5)
โ PM2.5 = <2.5 microns = most dangerous = enters bloodstream
โ CO = colourless + odourless = forms carboxyhaemoglobin = reduces Oโ carrying capacity
โ SOโ = from coal burning = causes acid rain + respiratory problems
โ NOโ = from high-temperature combustion = acid rain + photochemical smog
โ London smog = SOโ + fog = reducing type = cold + humid
โ Photochemical smog = NOโ + VOCs + sunlight = oxidising type = warm + sunny
โ PAN = secondary pollutant = eye irritant = damages plants
โ Acid rain = pH < 5.6 = HโSOโ + HNOโ = marble cancer = damages Taj Mahal
โ Normal rain pH = 5.6; acid rain pH < 5.6
โ AQI 0โ50 = Good; 101โ200 = Moderate; 301โ400 = Very Poor; 401โ500 = Severe
โ India’s AQI based on 8 pollutants including PM2.5, PM10, SOโ, NOโ, CO, Oโ
โ Temperature inversion = warm air traps cold air + pollutants near ground = worsens smog
โ NCAP 2019 = 40% reduction in PM by 2026 = 131 non-attainment cities
โ BS-VI = April 2020 = 10 ppm sulphur = leapfrogged from BS-IV
โ GRAP = Graded Response Action Plan = emergency measures for Delhi-NCR
โ Catalytic converter = converts CO + NOโ + hydrocarbons in vehicles
โ ESP = Electrostatic Precipitator = removes PM from industrial emissions
โ Taj Trapezium Zone (TTZ) = 10,400 sq km = restricts industries near Taj Mahal
โ Secondary pollutants = formed in atmosphere (ozone, PAN, smog, acid rain, secondary PM2.5)
โ PM2.5 = <2.5 microns = most dangerous = enters bloodstream
โ CO = colourless + odourless = forms carboxyhaemoglobin = reduces Oโ carrying capacity
โ SOโ = from coal burning = causes acid rain + respiratory problems
โ NOโ = from high-temperature combustion = acid rain + photochemical smog
โ London smog = SOโ + fog = reducing type = cold + humid
โ Photochemical smog = NOโ + VOCs + sunlight = oxidising type = warm + sunny
โ PAN = secondary pollutant = eye irritant = damages plants
โ Acid rain = pH < 5.6 = HโSOโ + HNOโ = marble cancer = damages Taj Mahal
โ Normal rain pH = 5.6; acid rain pH < 5.6
โ AQI 0โ50 = Good; 101โ200 = Moderate; 301โ400 = Very Poor; 401โ500 = Severe
โ India’s AQI based on 8 pollutants including PM2.5, PM10, SOโ, NOโ, CO, Oโ
โ Temperature inversion = warm air traps cold air + pollutants near ground = worsens smog
โ NCAP 2019 = 40% reduction in PM by 2026 = 131 non-attainment cities
โ BS-VI = April 2020 = 10 ppm sulphur = leapfrogged from BS-IV
โ GRAP = Graded Response Action Plan = emergency measures for Delhi-NCR
โ Catalytic converter = converts CO + NOโ + hydrocarbons in vehicles
โ ESP = Electrostatic Precipitator = removes PM from industrial emissions
โ Taj Trapezium Zone (TTZ) = 10,400 sq km = restricts industries near Taj Mahal