Conversation between five friends on Pradushan Mukt Delhi
Answers
Explanation:
If you are in Delhi during Diwali, the city buzzes with celebrations. It is a time of giving, of adorning your home with beautiful lights to entice the Goddess Lakshmi - who brings prosperity - into your home. Diwali is about some of the most delicious food, of sweets full of ghee and butter, of all-night card parties and time with family and friends.
Diwali also marks the last day of harvest and the setting of winter. But now in North India Diwali has an added characteristic; it marks the start of a period of hazardous air pollution.
At this time of year, the weather, celebratory practices and regional agriculture combine to create conditions in which air pollution around Delhi reaches 300 times the World Health Organisation standard for healthy air.
Monsoon season is over. This means pollution no longer gets washed away, and the drop in temperature traps pollutants lower in the atmosphere. Diwali celebrations also means burning unregulated firecrackers, which release large amounts of toxic chemicals into the air. The end of harvest also means the beginning of burning the crop stubble on thousands of acres of farmland adjacent to Delhi and surrounding cities. The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) reported over 12,000 incidents of crop burning the day after Diwali in Punjab and Haryana this year.
Answer:
snehal : yaar me to bohot pareshan hu is pollution se
shuraj: ise pareshan kon nahi hai
snehal:to koi kuch karta kyu nahi
jeel: ye kaam sab se government ko sop rakh hai
miral : ha he is right sab ko mil kar ispe kaam karna chahiye agar janta saath nahi degi to bhala government bhi kya karega
snehal: ha sahi hai
suraj : ha bhai baat to sahi hai hum bhi aab bharat ko pollution free banane ke liye jarur kuch karenge
snehal: hmm