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National Green Tribunal on Thursday passed a slew of directions including setting up of centralised and state-level monitoring committees to prepare action plans to combat pollution and asking four northern states to consider banning old diesel vehicles, in a bid to tackle environmental emergencies.
Terming the levels of pollution “severe” with pollutants PM 10 and PM 2.5 being above 431 and 251 in the ambient air, a bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Swatanter Kumar asked Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan to consider banning 10 -year-old diesel vehicles and petrol vehicles older than 15 years from plying on the roads.
The NGT directed that every state committee should, in their first meeting, notify one district where land use of agriculture is high and make it a model district for implementing orders to stop stubble burning.
In such situations, helicopters should be used to sprinkle water in the Delhi-NCR region, especially in those areas where pollution levels are in excess of the prescribed standard limits, the bench said.
Coming down heavily on states for not taking action against farmers burning farm residues, NGT asked the states, particularly Punjab, to consider withdrawal of incentive including grant of free power to farmers burning crops.
“All construction and demolition activities and transportation of construction material should be halted temporarily and stone crushers should be directed to shut down,” it said.
Providing breathable air to citizens is the “constitutional” obligation of the state governments, the NGT observed and directed them to install air purifiers in government schools.
“If thermal power plants, hot mix plants and brick kilns are found to be emitting pollution more than the prescribed standards during an emergency situation, they should be shut down temporarily till they reduce level of emissions,” the bench said.
“All five state governments shall start vacuum cleaning of roads to prevent dust pollution and vehicular pollution,” the bench said.
The green panel directed the inter-state central monitoring committee and state committees to enforce their orders on vehicular pollution, dust pollution, solid waste and crop burning.
While the Central monitoring committee would meet once in two months starting from 17 November, the state-level committees would conduct meetings every month starting 24 November, it directed.