Write a letter to the editor of your local highlighting the rise in pollution due to increase traffic on the streets and making suggestions about how this can be controlled
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437 , beml layout
New Delhi
India
19 April , 2018
To ,
Editor of New Delhi times
New Delhi
Sir,
pollution has become major problem in New Delhi. Schools are being closed and everyone is suffering from heart and breathing problem . People are avoiding to play outdoor games .
while there is no air pollution monitoring for nearly 580 million people, real-time data are available for a population of only 190 million. Most children under five years live in cities where PM10 levels are more than twice the safe standard — Uttar Pradesh (6.3 million) and Rajasthan (2.1 million), followed by Bihar (1.7 million), Maharashtra (1.4 million) and Delhi (1.4 million)
"Only 16% of the population inhabiting the districts has real-time air quality data available, showing how inhumanly we are responding to the national health crisis in front of us. Even the manual data collected for 300 cities/towns across the country are not shared in a timely manner and in a format that can be accessed and understood easily by general public," Sunil Dahiya, senior campaigner, Greenpeace India, said.
thank you
your sincerely
namratha rao
resident of new delhi
New Delhi
India
19 April , 2018
To ,
Editor of New Delhi times
New Delhi
Sir,
pollution has become major problem in New Delhi. Schools are being closed and everyone is suffering from heart and breathing problem . People are avoiding to play outdoor games .
while there is no air pollution monitoring for nearly 580 million people, real-time data are available for a population of only 190 million. Most children under five years live in cities where PM10 levels are more than twice the safe standard — Uttar Pradesh (6.3 million) and Rajasthan (2.1 million), followed by Bihar (1.7 million), Maharashtra (1.4 million) and Delhi (1.4 million)
"Only 16% of the population inhabiting the districts has real-time air quality data available, showing how inhumanly we are responding to the national health crisis in front of us. Even the manual data collected for 300 cities/towns across the country are not shared in a timely manner and in a format that can be accessed and understood easily by general public," Sunil Dahiya, senior campaigner, Greenpeace India, said.
thank you
your sincerely
namratha rao
resident of new delhi
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