Context:
The Delhi Government has unveiled the Air Pollution Mitigation Action Plan 2026 ahead of winter, aiming to shift from reactive to proactive pollution control.
Key Highlights:
- Government Initiative / Policy Details
- Focus on source-based emission reduction (vehicles, waste, dust, industry).
- Transition from seasonal emergency measures to year-round planning.
- Transport & Emission Control Measures
- Expansion of electric bus fleet to 13,760 by 2028–29.
- Installation of 32,000 EV charging stations.
- Promotion of public transport, metro connectivity, and feeder services.
- Waste Management & Landfill Targets
- Removal of legacy landfills:
- Okhla – by July
- Bhalswa – by December
- Ghazipur – by December 2027
- Prevention of waste burning and improved solid waste management.
- Dust & Infrastructure Control
- Road redevelopment with paved surfaces and green buffers.
- Measures to reduce construction and road dust pollution.
- Industrial Monitoring
- Introduction of online emission monitoring systems for industries.
- Significance / Concerns
- Aims to reduce winter smog severity.
- However, firecracker ban enforcement remains critical.
- Success depends on implementation and inter-agency coordination.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- BS-VI Norms: Advanced emission standards reducing pollutants like NOx and PM.
- Electric Vehicles (EVs): Zero tailpipe emissions; reduce urban air pollution.
- PUC Certificate: Mandatory emission compliance for vehicles.
- Major Sources of Delhi Pollution:
- Vehicular emissions
- Construction dust
- Industrial pollution
- Stubble burning (regional factor)
Relevant Mains Points:
- Urban Air Pollution Challenges in India
- Multi-source and transboundary nature of pollution.
- Seasonal spikes due to meteorological conditions (inversion).
- Significance of the Plan
- Promotes clean mobility transition.
- Integrates waste management with pollution control.
- Aligns with climate commitments and sustainable urbanisation.
- Challenges
- Weak enforcement of regulations (PUC, firecracker ban).
- Coordination issues among multiple agencies (Delhi, NCR states).
- Financial and infrastructure constraints for EV transition.
- Way Forward
- Strengthen regional coordination (NCR approach).
- Strict enforcement of pollution norms and bans.
- Promote citizen participation and awareness.
- Expand renewable energy and clean fuel adoption.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper 3: Environment, Pollution, Urban Governance
