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    How China dealt with air pollution, lessons for India

    2 min read

    India's Air Pollution Problem

    India faces severe air pollution issues, particularly during winters due to smog in northern cities like Delhi, exacerbated by meteorological factors such as low temperatures and wind direction, as well as farm stubble burning and festive firecrackers.

    Comparison with China

    China offers a potential model for addressing air pollution. Both India and China have faced similar pollution drivers, such as rapid development and urbanization. The 2023 study highlights that India's current pollution levels mirror those of China in the late 2000s.

    China's Air Pollution Solutions

    • China's efforts were catalyzed by public protests and international events like the 2008 Beijing Olympics highlighting pollution issues.
    • Key pollutants included PM2.5 from heavy industry, coal burning, vehicle emissions, and crop burning.
    • Since 2013, significant air quality improvements have been noted due to government interventions.

    China's Interventions

    • Implemented the cadre evaluation system through the Chinese Communist Party to ensure officials meet environmental targets.
    • Invested in pollution control equipment and closed outdated industrial facilities.
    • Promoted the adoption of Electric Vehicles (EVs), like Shenzhen's complete electrification of its bus fleet.
    • Improved air quality through controls on coal boilers, cleaner residential heating, and vehicle emissions controls.

    Challenges and Caveats

    • Implementation pressure sometimes results in falsified data and covert factory reopenings.
    • Recent commitments to increase coal capacity pose risks to air quality improvements.
    • China's air quality standards remain lower than Western standards.

    Lessons for India

    • China's approach involved continuous, long-term actions, unlike India's reactive measures under GRAP.
    • India faces additional challenges from household emissions, particularly in rural areas.
    • Lack of equitable resource access and the perceived trade-off between environmental goals and economic growth.
    • India's decentralized governance contrasts with China's unitary system, complicating accountability.

    Potential Strategies for India

    India can adopt strategies like stringent emission regulations, expanding cleaner fuels, and promoting public transport. Robust environmental monitoring and scientific research are crucial for success.

    • Tags :
    • Air Pollution
    • GRAP
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