HomeNewsIndiaThree years on, shoddy implementation of NCAP by states likely to derail 2024 clean air goals

Three years on, shoddy implementation of NCAP by states likely to derail 2024 clean air goals

Three years have passed since the National Clean Air Programme was launched by the Centre, yet none of the 132 non-attainment cities have completed their carrying capacity studies – an assessment of the region’s ability to accumulate and disperse emissions while maintaining breathable air quality, a CREA study has found.

January 10, 2022 / 20:55 IST
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(Representative image: Shutterstock)
(Representative image: Shutterstock)

The National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) was launched by the Ministry of Environment and Forest (MoEF&CC) three years ago on January 10, 2019, with the goal of reducing air pollution levels by 20-30 percent in the next five years.

However, in the three years that have passed, little to no progress has been made by states to implement the programme and reduce PM 2.5 levels in 132 cities across the country, researchers at the Centre for Research and on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) have found.

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In a report titled ‘Tracing the Hazy Air: Progress Report on National Clean Air Programme (NCAP)’, CREA highlighted that barring city-specific action plans, no other plan has been formulated under NCAP prescribed timelines. The state action plans, regional action plans, and the transboundary action plan are yet to see the light of the day.

Explaining why CREA tracked the progress made by the states instead of analysing the air quality, Sunil Dahiya, author of the report and an analyst at CREA, said: “The past two years have been unusual due to the COVID-19 pandemic resulting in a halt for industrial and economic activities due to national and regional lockdowns, so a better indicator to track the effectiveness and implementation of NCAP was to track the progress on indicators identified under the programme.”