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Delhi's air emergency: Why national capital chokes year after year — Stubble burning link explained

Every winter, Delhi finds itself battling a public health emergency as smog blankets the city and AQI levels plummet to hazardous lows. At the heart of this crisis lies the practice of stubble burning.

October 03, 2025 / 11:06 IST
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A farmer burns stubble after a harvest at a paddy field, on the outskirts of Amritsar. (PTI photo)

It’s that time of the year again — when Delhi turns into a gas chamber, gasping for breath under a thick toxic haze. The national capital slips into an annual air emergency as pollution levels soar and the Air Quality Index (AQI) plunges to hazardous lows.

While multiple factors fuel this crisis, stubble burning in neighbouring states remains a leading culprit, accounting for over 30 per cent of Delhi-NCR’s pollution in 2024. Add to this the relentless vehicular emissions and unfavourable weather conditions that trap pollutants in the air, and the capital finds itself suffocating in a recurring nightmare.

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What is stubble burning?

Stubble (parali) burning is a method of removing paddy crop residues from the field to sow wheat from the last week of September to November. Stubble burning is a process of setting on fire the straw stubble, left after the harvesting of grains, like paddy, wheat, etc. It is usually required in areas that use the combined harvesting method which leaves crop residue behind.