HomeNewsCricketIndia AQI: ODI World Cup in the time of heavy air pollution

India AQI: ODI World Cup in the time of heavy air pollution

Air quality and cricket: Why this World Cup is not just about the sport, but also a conversation on pollution

November 04, 2023 / 08:39 IST
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Mumbai and Kolkata host the two semifinals on November 15 and 16, on days when the air quality is likely to be worse than it is currently.
Mumbai and Kolkata will host the two ODI World Cup semifinals on November 15 and 16, days after Diwali on November 12, when the air quality is likely to be worse than it is now. (Photo via X)

When Sri Lanka played a Test match in Delhi in December 2017, the match was halted repeatedly owing to the players’ discomfort with the pollution levels in the city. On the second day of the third Test of that series, with air pollution levels at 15 times of the World Health Organization limits, according to reports, the Lankans were continuously vomiting, had to halt play for 20 minutes to consult doctors and returned from lunch wearing face masks. According to the Lankan coach, there were oxygen cylinders in the changing room.

While the players got booed by the less-than-sporting Delhi spectators, the Board of Control for Cricket in India’s (BCCI) then acting president said, according to the Guardian, that if the Indian team and 20,000 people in the stands did not have a problem, “I wonder why did the Sri Lankan team make a big fuss?”

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Sri Lankan cricket has been facing a bit of a challenge when playing against India in recent times. If that 2017 experience was one aspect of it, their 302-run loss in the World Cup match at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai on Thursday was another. At one point, Lanka looked like they might beat the lowest-ever one-day international (ODI) score (36 by Canada, ironically against Sri Lanka this February), but managed to pull through to a total of 55 all out. India has won the last six ODIs against Lanka, which include large margins of 10 wickets (in Colombo in September) and 317 runs (in Thiruvananthapuram in January) besides this week’s 302-run demolition.

Though Sri Lanka did not mention the pollution as a factor, it is one of the talking points of this World Cup. The air quality index (AQI), which is a measure of air pollution, in Mumbai on Thursday was 155, considered unhealthy. In Colombo, Sri Lanka’s biggest city, the AQI on Thursday was 41, considered good. In comparison, Delhi, the world’s most polluted city by a margin, on Friday had an AQI of 500-plus, considered hazardous. For comparison, some of the other major cities in the world have healthy AQIs in the region of 13 (Melbourne), 25 (Amsterdam), 29 (London) and 32 (Johannesburg)—all cities from countries that are participating in this World Cup.