Air pollution

1. Introduction

Air pollution refers to the presence of harmful substances (gases, particulates, or biological molecules) in the atmosphere in concentrations that endanger human health, plants, animals, and the environment.

📘 Definition (WHO):

“Air pollution is contamination of the indoor or outdoor environment by any chemical, physical, or biological agent that modifies the natural characteristics of the atmosphere.”


2. Composition of Clean Air

GasPercentage by Volume
Nitrogen (N₂)78.08%
Oxygen (O₂)20.95%
Argon (Ar)0.93%
Carbon dioxide (CO₂)0.04%
Others (Ne, He, CH₄, H₂, O₃, etc.)Trace amounts

Pollution occurs when this composition is altered by harmful pollutants.


3. Types of Air Pollution

(A) Based on Origin

TypeDescriptionExamples
Primary pollutantsEmitted directly from identifiable sourcesSO₂, CO, NO, hydrocarbons, particulates
Secondary pollutantsFormed by chemical reactions among primary pollutants in the atmosphereO₃ (ozone), PAN (peroxyacetyl nitrate), smog

(B) Based on Occurrence

  • Natural Pollution: Volcanic eruptions, forest fires, dust storms, pollen, sea spray.
  • Anthropogenic (Human-made): Industrial emissions, vehicular exhaust, burning of fossil fuels, agriculture, and waste burning.

4. Major Air Pollutants and Their Sources

PollutantSourcesEffects
Carbon monoxide (CO)Incomplete combustion of fuels, vehiclesHeadache, dizziness, reduced oxygen transport in blood
Sulphur dioxide (SO₂)Thermal power plants, refineries, volcanoesRespiratory problems, acid rain
Nitrogen oxides (NO, NO₂)Vehicles, industries, power plantsSmog, lung irritation, acid rain
Particulate matter (PM₂.₅ & PM₁₀)Dust, smoke, vehicles, industriesRespiratory and cardiovascular diseases
Ozone (O₃)Secondary pollutant (photochemical smog)Eye irritation, breathing problems, damages crops
Lead (Pb)Leaded petrol (now banned), batteries, smeltingBrain damage, developmental disorders in children
Hydrocarbons (HCs)Fuel evaporation, vehicle exhaustCarcinogenic, contributes to smog
Carbon dioxide (CO₂)Burning of fossil fuels, deforestationGlobal warming, climate change
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)Refrigerants, aerosolsOzone layer depletion
Ammonia (NH₃)Fertilizers, animal wasteAirway irritation, particulate formation

5. Important Air Pollution Episodes (Case Studies)

EventYearLocationImpact
Meuse Valley Fog1930BelgiumIndustrial SO₂ & particulates caused 60 deaths
Donora Smog1948USAInversion trapped pollutants; 20 deaths
London Smog1952UK4,000+ deaths due to coal smoke and fog
Bhopal Gas Tragedy1984IndiaMIC gas leak killed thousands; respiratory and genetic damage
Delhi Smog CrisisRecent (2016–2024)IndiaCrop residue burning + vehicles → hazardous AQI

6. Effects of Air Pollution

(A) On Human Health

  • Respiratory diseases: asthma, bronchitis, lung cancer.
  • Cardiovascular disorders.
  • Eye and skin irritation.
  • Fatigue, headache, reduced immunity.
  • Lead and mercury → brain and nervous system damage.

(B) On Plants

  • Chlorosis (loss of leaf color).
  • Reduced photosynthesis due to dust on leaves.
  • Acid rain → damages leaves and soil nutrients.
  • Ozone → leaf injury and stunted growth.

(C) On Animals

  • Ingestion of contaminated fodder.
  • Acid rain affects aquatic life and food chains.

(D) On Environment and Climate

  • Smog formation (London-type or photochemical).
  • Acid rain (from SO₂ and NOₓ).
  • Ozone layer depletion (due to CFCs).
  • Global warming (from CO₂, CH₄, N₂O).
  • Visibility reduction and deterioration of heritage monuments (e.g., Taj Mahal).

7. Control of Air Pollution

(A) Source Control

  • Use of clean fuels (CNG, LPG, electricity).
  • Catalytic converters in vehicles.
  • Electrostatic precipitators in industries to trap particulates.
  • Scrubbers and filters for flue gases.
  • Maintenance of engines and machinery.

(B) Technological and Planning Measures

  • Shift industries away from populated areas.
  • Promote public transport and non-motorized mobility.
  • Use of green belt buffers around factories.
  • Adoption of renewable energy (solar, wind).
  • Vehicle emission standards (Bharat Stage VI norms in India).

(C) Legal and Policy Measures (India)

Law / PolicyYearPurpose
Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act1981Framework for controlling and monitoring air pollution
Environment (Protection) Act1986Umbrella law for environmental protection
National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS)2009 (revised)Specifies safe limits for key pollutants
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP)2019Reduce PM₂.₅ and PM₁₀ levels by 40% by 2026
Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM)2021Regulates air quality in NCR and adjoining areas

8. International Efforts

Agreement / OrganizationObjective
Stockholm Conference (1972)First global call for pollution control
UNEP (1972)United Nations Environment Programme
Montreal Protocol (1987)Control CFCs and ozone-depleting substances
Kyoto Protocol (1997)Limit greenhouse gas emissions
Paris Agreement (2015)Global commitment to combat climate change
WHO Air Quality Guidelines (2021)Revised global safe limits for key pollutants

9. Air Quality Measurement

Common Parameters (India – CPCB Standards)

PollutantAveraging TimePermissible Limit (µg/m³)
PM₂.₅24 hours60
PM₁₀24 hours100
SO₂24 hours80
NO₂24 hours80
CO8 hours2 mg/m³
O₃8 hours100
PbAnnual0.5

AQI (Air Quality Index):

  • 0–50 → Good
  • 51–100 → Satisfactory
  • 101–200 → Moderate
  • 201–300 → Poor
  • 301–400 → Very Poor
  • 401–500 → Severe

10. Preventive and Community Measures

  • Promote afforestation and urban greenery.
  • Reduce open burning of waste and crop residue.
  • Encourage carpooling, public transport, and cycling.
  • Regular vehicle emission checks.
  • Awareness campaigns (e.g., “Clean Air for All”, “Beat Air Pollution”).
  • Citizen participation in air quality monitoring (apps like SAFAR, Sameer).

11. Recent Concerns and Emerging Issues

  • Indoor air pollution from cooking fuels, incense, mosquito coils.
  • Microplastics and nanoparticles in air.
  • Transboundary pollution — e.g., haze over South and Southeast Asia.
  • Climate change–air pollution nexus (both share common causes).
  • COVID-19 lockdown provided evidence of improved air quality — highlighting anthropogenic influence.

12. Conclusion

Air pollution is one of the gravest environmental and public health issues of our time. It demands a multi-sectoral approach — combining technology, governance, and citizen responsibility — to ensure clean air for sustainable living.

🌍 “If you can’t see the air, you can’t ignore it — clean air is a human right.”


13. Summary Table (Quick Revision)

AspectKey Points
Major pollutantsCO, SO₂, NO₂, PM, O₃, Pb, CFCs
TypesPrimary & Secondary
Key effectsRespiratory illness, acid rain, global warming
Key eventsLondon Smog (1952), Bhopal (1984), Delhi Smog
Indian lawsAir Act (1981), EPA (1986), NCAP (2019)
Global treatiesMontreal, Kyoto, Paris
Control measuresClean fuels, filters, afforestation, public awareness
Safe PM₂.₅ limit (India)60 µg/m³ (24-hour average)

Leave a Reply