Air Pollution & AQI India — UPSC Environment Notes

Air Pollution | Major & Minor Pollutants | AQI India | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
UPSC Prelims + Mains · Environment · Current Affairs 2025

Air Pollution 🏭😷

The topic students dread but UPSC loves. Every pollutant explained with a villain profile, an analogy, and its exact UPSC exam angle — with Delhi 2025 zero-good-days data and World Air Quality Report 2025.

0
Good air quality days in Delhi — entire 2025
48.9
India’s avg PM2.5 µg/m³ (2025) — 10× WHO limit
2.1M
Deaths linked to air pollution in India (2021)
#6
India’s global rank — most polluted countries (2025)
204/238
Indian cities failing national PM2.5 standards (winter 2025-26)
1

Why Air Pollution Is UPSC’s Favourite “Boring” Topic

It connects science, health, geography, policy — and appears in prelims AND mains every year

💡 Think of Air as India’s Most Shared Public Good — and the Most Abused One

Every Indian breathes the same air. It doesn’t care about income, caste, or address. But the pollution that contaminates it comes from factories serving the rich, vehicles driven by the middle class, and crop stubble burned by desperate farmers. Air pollution is simultaneously a science topic (what are the molecules?), a health topic (what do they do to bodies?), a geography topic (why is the Indo-Gangetic Plain India’s pollution trap?), and a policy topic (who governs the air?). That’s why UPSC loves it — it cuts across everything. In 2025, Delhi had zero “Good” AQI days for the entire year. Not a single day. That’s the magnitude of the crisis.

What is Air Pollution?
  • The contamination of air by chemical, physical, or biological agents that alter its natural composition and harm living organisms
  • Natural air is approximately: 78% Nitrogen (N₂) · 21% Oxygen (O₂) · 0.93% Argon · 0.04% CO₂ · traces of other gases
  • Any substance that changes this composition and causes harm = air pollutant
  • Pollutants can be primary (emitted directly) or secondary (formed in the atmosphere by chemical reactions between primary pollutants)
2

Classification of Pollutants

Three ways UPSC asks you to classify — all three covered here
Classification BasisType 1Type 2Note
Origin / FormationPrimary Pollutants — emitted directly from source. E.g.: CO from cars, SO₂ from factories, PM from industriesSecondary Pollutants — formed in atmosphere by chemical reactions. E.g.: Ozone (O₃ formed from NOx + VOCs + sunlight), H₂SO₄ (acid rain), smogMost dangerous pollutants are secondary — harder to control!
Physical StateParticulate (solid/liquid particles suspended in air): PM2.5, PM10, dust, soot, fly ash, pollenGaseous: CO, CO₂, SO₂, NOₓ, O₃, NH₃, VOCs, benzeneParticulate + gaseous together create smog
SourceNatural: Volcanic eruptions, forest fires, sea salt, pollen, radon, dust stormsAnthropogenic (man-made): Vehicles, industries, power plants, agriculture, constructionUPSC often asks to distinguish — natural sources are uncontrollable but anthropogenic ones are policy targets
DegradabilityBiodegradable: Break down naturally (CO, methane — though slowly)Non-biodegradable: Persist indefinitely (lead, dioxins, PCBs, heavy metals)Non-biodegradable pollutants bioaccumulate up the food chain
Major Sources of Air Pollution — India Context
🚗

Vehicles

Delhi: 40% of PM2.5. CO, NOx, PM, benzene, VOCs. BS-VI norms from 2020 reduced emissions but fleet size keeps growing.

🏭

Industry

SO₂, NOx, PM, heavy metals. Thermal power plants are India’s single largest SO₂ source. Brick kilns, cement, steel plants.

🌾

Agriculture / Stubble Burning

38% of Delhi’s winter PM2.5. Punjab-Haryana farmers burn paddy stubble (Oct-Nov) to prepare for wheat. PM2.5, CO, black carbon.

🪵

Domestic / Household

30–50% of ambient PM2.5 year-round. Biomass burning (wood, dung, crop residue) for cooking and heating. Indoor pollution is 5× worse than outdoor in villages.

🏗️

Construction / Road Dust

Major PM10 source in cities. Uncovered construction sites, unpaved roads, sand transport. India’s rapid urbanisation makes this grow.

🌋

Natural Sources

Dust storms (Rajasthan → Delhi in summer), forest fires, sea salt spray, volcanic emissions, pollen. Not controllable but affect AQI.

3

Particulate Matter — PM2.5 & PM10

UPSC’s most asked pollutant — know the size, source, health effect, and Indian standards

💡 The Size Analogy — Understand PM Once and Remember Forever

A human hair is about 70 micrometres in diameter. PM10 = 10 µm = 7 times smaller than a hair. PM2.5 = 2.5 µm = 28 times smaller than a hair. Now here’s the crucial difference: PM10 gets caught in your nose and throat — unpleasant but manageable. PM2.5 is so tiny it bypasses all your body’s filters, reaches the deepest part of your lungs (alveoli), and passes directly into your bloodstream. That’s why PM2.5 causes heart attacks, strokes, and cancer — not just coughs. Think of PM10 as the burglar who gets stopped at the door. PM2.5 is the one who slips through the window, reaches your bedroom, and attacks you while you sleep.

FeaturePM10PM2.5
Size≤10 micrometres≤2.5 micrometres
Comparator~1/7th of human hair~1/28th of human hair; 30× smaller than hair
ClassificationCoarse particles (inhalable)Fine particles (respirable)
Body penetrationStops at throat and upper airwaysReaches alveoli; enters bloodstream
Health effectsRespiratory irritation, asthmaHeart attacks, stroke, lung cancer, premature death, infant mortality
WHO Annual Guideline15 µg/m³5 µg/m³
India NAAQS Annual60 µg/m³40 µg/m³
Delhi 2025 (annual avg)Well above NAAQS82.2 µg/m³ — nearly 16× WHO limit
India 2025 (national avg)48.9 µg/m³ — nearly 10× WHO limit
Major SourcesDust, construction, road dust, miningVehicle exhaust, power plants, crop burning, secondary formation from SO₂/NOx
In India’s AQI?✅ Yes✅ Yes
Also: Suspended Particulate Matter (SPM) vs RSPM
  • SPM (Suspended Particulate Matter): All particles suspended in air regardless of size. Older monitoring parameter.
  • RSPM (Respirable SPM): Particles with aerodynamic diameter ≤10 µm — same as PM10. The term RSPM is used in older Indian environmental legislation and CPCB reports.
  • Fly Ash: Fine particulate matter from coal combustion in thermal power plants. Consists of silicon dioxide (SiO₂), aluminium oxide (Al₂O₃), calcium oxide (CaO). India generates ~200 million tonnes/year. Use of fly ash mandated within 100 km of plants — in bricks, cement, road construction. Unmanaged fly ash is a major particulate pollutant.
  • Nanoparticles (NPs): <100 nm in size. Emerging concern — can cross blood-brain barrier, reach fetal tissues. Sources: Vehicle exhaust (especially diesel), tyre wear, industrial emissions. Not yet in mainstream AQI monitoring but increasingly studied.
4

India’s National AQI — “One Number, One Colour, One Description”

Launched 2014 · 8 pollutants · 0–500 scale · CPCB + IIT Kanpur
AQI — Key Facts for UPSC
  • Launched: September 17, 2014 under Swachh Bharat Abhiyan
  • Developed by: CPCB (Central Pollution Control Board) with IIT Kanpur
  • Tagline: “One Number – One Colour – One Description”
  • Covers: 8 pollutants — PM10, PM2.5, NO₂, SO₂, CO, O₃ (Ozone), NH₃ (Ammonia), Pb (Lead)
  • Calculation: The worst sub-index of all 8 pollutants sets the overall AQI category
  • Scale: 0–500
  • NAAQS (National Ambient Air Quality Standards) by CPCB covers 12 pollutants — AQI’s 8 + Benzene, Benzo(a)Pyrene, Arsenic, Nickel
AQI Categories — India
Range
Category
Colour
Health Impact
0–50
Good
Green
Minimal impact
51–100
Satisfactory
Light Green
Minor breathing discomfort to sensitive people
101–200
Moderate
Yellow
Breathing discomfort to people with lung/heart diseases, children, elderly
201–300
Poor
Orange
Breathing discomfort to most people on prolonged exposure
301–400
Very Poor
Red
Respiratory illness on prolonged exposure; GRAP Stage 3 triggered
401–500
Severe (+)
Maroon
Serious health effects even in healthy people; health emergency; GRAP Stage 4
🔴 Delhi AQI Crisis — 2024–25 Data Current Affairs
  • Delhi 2025: Zero “Good” AQI days for the ENTIRE year — first time recorded. Not a single day met clean air benchmarks (US EPA standards)
  • Delhi annual PM2.5 (2025): 82.2 µg/m³ — making it world’s most polluted capital city (World Air Quality Report 2025)
  • November 18, 2024: Delhi AQI hit 491 — “Severe Plus” — effectively a public health emergency
  • November 12, 2024: Delhi reached global peak AQI of 1,200 for a brief period
  • Winter 2025-26: 204 out of 238 Indian cities failed national PM2.5 standards (CREA analysis, CPCB data)
5

The Pollutant Villain Profiles 🦹

Every major pollutant explained as a villain — so you never forget their crimes, sources, and weaknesses
🔴

PM2.5

The Silent Infiltrator
CrimeEnters bloodstream directly → heart attacks, strokes, cancer, infant death
SourcesVehicles (diesel!), crop burning, power plants, secondary formation from SO₂+NOₓ
Size≤2.5 µm; 28× smaller than a hair
WHO limit5 µg/m³/year · Delhi: 82.2!
WeaknessN95 masks, air purifiers, reducing combustion
🟠

PM10

The Dusty Mugger
CrimeClogs upper airways, causes asthma, bronchitis; caught in nose/throat but irritating
SourcesRoad dust, construction, mining, fly ash, desert dust storms (Rajasthan → Delhi)
Size≤10 µm; can reach lungs but not alveoli
WHO limit15 µg/m³/year · India NAAQS: 60 µg/m³
WeaknessDust covers, water sprinkling at construction sites, green belts

Black Carbon (Soot)

The Glacier Killer
CrimeDeposits on Himalayan glaciers → reduces albedo → accelerates melting. Also 2nd biggest climate forcer after CO₂.
SourcesIncomplete combustion: diesel engines, biomass burning (crop burning, chulhas), wildfires, coal plants
TypeSLCP (Short-Lived Climate Pollutant) — stays in atmosphere only days-weeks but very potent
UPSC angleNorth Indian crop burning → black carbon → Himalayan glacier retreat — asked in Mains 2023
WeaknessBS-VI standards, clean cookstoves (PM2.5 + BC together = worst indoor pollution)
🔵

Ozone (O₃)

The Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde
Jekyll (Good)Stratospheric ozone (15–35 km altitude) — absorbs UV-B and UV-C radiation. Our sunscreen shield!
Hyde (Bad)Ground-level ozone (troposphere) — lung irritant, destroys crops. Forms from NOₓ + VOCs + sunlight. Worsens in hot weather.
Ozone depletionCFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) break down stratospheric O₃ → UV radiation increases → skin cancer, cataracts
Montreal Protocol1987 — most successful international environmental treaty. Phased out CFCs/HCFCs. Ozone hole slowly healing.
Kigali Amendment2016 — expanded Montreal to include HFCs (potent greenhouse gases used as CFC replacements)
🟡

NOₓ (Nitrogen Oxides)

The Acid Rain Kingpin
MembersNO (nitric oxide) + NO₂ (nitrogen dioxide). NO₂ is more harmful; brownish-reddish colour gives Delhi smog its tinge
Crime 1Reacts with water → HNO₃ (nitric acid) → acid rain → damages buildings (Taj Mahal yellowing!)
Crime 2NOₓ + VOCs + sunlight → ground-level ozone (secondary pollution)
Crime 3Respiratory diseases, lung damage, asthma
SourcesHigh-temperature combustion: vehicles, power plants, industrial boilers
WeaknessCatalytic converters in cars, SCR (Selective Catalytic Reduction) in power plants
🟢

SO₂ (Sulphur Dioxide)

The Acid Rain Co-Conspirator
Crime 1SO₂ + water → H₂SO₄ (sulphuric acid) → acid rain (pH <5.6 = acid rain)
Crime 2Respiratory damage; aggravates asthma and bronchitis
Crime 3Contributes to PM2.5 formation (secondary sulfate particles)
SourcesCoal-burning power plants = #1 source in India; volcanic eruptions
Taj MahalSO₂ + HNO₃ → yellow/black crust on marble = “Marble Cancer”
WeaknessFGD (Flue Gas Desulphurisation) technology in power plants; low-sulphur fuels
🟣

CO (Carbon Monoxide)

The Invisible Assassin
SuperpowerOdourless, colourless, tasteless — you cannot detect it without sensors
CrimeBinds to haemoglobin 250× more strongly than O₂ → forms carboxyhaemoglobin (COHb) → cells starved of oxygen → death
SourcesIncomplete combustion: vehicles (especially without catalytic converters), generators, gas stoves
UPSC angleCO is a product of incomplete combustion. Complete combustion → CO₂ (harmful but not toxic). Incomplete → CO (deadly)
WeaknessCatalytic converters convert CO → CO₂. Good ventilation. CO detectors at home.
⚙️

Lead (Pb)

The Brain Wrecker
CrimeNeurotoxin — causes irreversible brain damage, IQ reduction in children, kidney failure
SourcesHistorically: leaded petrol (banned in India since 2000). Still: lead smelting, battery manufacturing, old paint
Legacy issueLead in soil near old roads persists for decades after leaded petrol ban. Urban children still exposed.
In AQI?Yes — Lead (Pb) is one of India’s 8 AQI pollutants
WeaknessNo safe level of lead exposure. Source control is the only solution.
Additional Key Pollutants
PollutantKey Facts for UPSCClassic UPSC Question Angle
CO₂ (Carbon Dioxide)Primary greenhouse gas. Natural level: ~421 ppm (2025). Emitted from all combustion. NOT toxic at ambient levels but drives climate change. Removed by photosynthesis.CO₂ vs CO confusion: CO₂ = greenhouse gas; CO = toxic pollutant. Both from combustion but CO from incomplete combustion.
VOCs (Volatile Organic Compounds)Evaporate at room temperature. Examples: benzene, toluene, formaldehyde. Sources: solvents, paints, vehicle exhaust. React with NOₓ to form ground-level ozone and smog.VOCs + NOₓ + sunlight → ozone (secondary pollutant). VOCs are ozone precursors.
Benzene (C₆H₆)Carcinogenic VOC. Sources: vehicle exhaust (esp. petrol), solvents. Known human carcinogen (causes leukemia). In India’s NAAQS (12 pollutants) but NOT in AQI (8 pollutants).Benzene is in NAAQS but NOT in AQI — a common trap question.
NH₃ (Ammonia)From fertiliser use and livestock. Reacts in atmosphere to form secondary PM2.5 (ammonium sulfate, ammonium nitrate). Major contributor to Indo-Gangetic Plain winter haze.Agriculture → ammonia → secondary PM2.5. Key connection between farm emissions and urban air pollution.
Ethylene (C₂H₄)Plant hormone — also an air pollutant. Accelerates fruit ripening and leaf drop. Sources: vehicle exhaust, natural (from plants). Used artificially to ripen bananas.Ethylene as plant hormone vs air pollutant — dual role asked in UPSC.
AsbestosFibrous silicate mineral. Extremely carcinogenic — causes mesothelioma (lung cancer). Banned for most uses in India but still used in some construction materials. Fibres can remain airborne for years.Asbestos ban status in India — still partially legal unlike in EU where it’s fully banned.
7

India’s Air Pollution Response — Schemes & Policies

From NCAP to GRAP to BS-VI — know them all with their exact details

NCAP — National Clean Air Programme

Launched: January 2019 by MoEFCC. Target: 40% reduction in PM10 and PM2.5 by 2026 (base year 2019-20) in 131 non-attainment cities. Implementing agency: CPCB. Cities monitored via CAAQMS (Continuous Ambient Air Quality Monitoring Stations).

GRAP — Graded Response Action Plan

Emergency framework for Delhi-NCR only. 4 stages triggered by AQI: Stage 1 (Poor 201-300) → Stage 4 (Severe+ >450 = school closures, truck ban, consider odd-even). Implemented by: CAQM (Commission for Air Quality Management).

BS-VI Emission Standards

India leapfrogged BS-IV to BS-VI in April 2020 — skipping BS-V. Equivalent to Euro-VI. Significantly cuts PM, NOₓ, SO₂ from vehicles. Ultra-low sulphur fuel (≤10 ppm sulphur in petrol/diesel). Enables Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) and DPF (Diesel Particulate Filters).

CAQM — Commission for Air Quality Management

Statutory body formed 2021 specifically for NCR and adjoining areas. Superseded EPCA (Environment Pollution Control Authority). Coordinates across Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Rajasthan, UP on air quality. Can issue binding directives, impose penalties.

SAFAR — System of Air Quality & Weather Forecasting

Launched by Ministry of Earth Sciences (NOT MoEFCC — UPSC trap!). Provides city-specific, location-specific air quality forecast in near real-time. Covers more pollutants than AQI (includes benzene, toluene, xylene, mercury). Cities: Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, Ahmedabad.

PRANA Portal

Portal for “Monitoring of Implementation of City Action Plans” under NCAP. Real-time dashboard showing city-wise progress on pollution reduction targets. Ensures transparency and accountability in NCAP implementation.

Key Legal Framework — Air Pollution in India
  • Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981: Primary legislation; establishes CPCB and SPCBs; sets emission standards; consent/permit mechanism for industries
  • Environment Protection Act, 1986: Umbrella law; Noise Pollution Rules 2000 under this act
  • National Green Tribunal (NGT): Judicial body that has issued many landmark orders on air quality (e.g., banning old diesel vehicles in Delhi NCR, firecracker restrictions)
  • CPCB (Central Pollution Control Board): Sets NAAQS; monitors; advises MoEFCC. State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBs) implement at state level
8

Current Affairs 2024–2025 — Air Pollution

All the data points UPSC will ask — from World Air Quality Report 2025 to GRAP applications
🔴 World Air Quality Report 2025 (IQAir) — Released March 2025 Current Affairs
  • Released by: IQAir (Swiss air quality technology company) — analysed 9,446 cities across 143 countries from 40,000+ monitoring stations
  • India’s national average PM2.5: 48.9 µg/m³ (slight improvement from 50.6 in 2024 — but still nearly 10× WHO limit)
  • India’s global rank: 6th most polluted country (down from 5th in 2024 — slight improvement)
  • Most polluted capital city: New Delhi (82.2 µg/m³ PM2.5 annual average)
  • Most polluted region in India: Loni, Uttar Pradesh (112.5 µg/m³)
  • Top 5 most polluted countries globally: Pakistan (67.3) · Bangladesh (66.1) · Tajikistan (57.3) · Chad (53.6) · DRC (50.2) → India (48.9) at 6th
  • 17 of the world’s 20 most polluted cities are in India and Pakistan
  • WHO compliance: Only 14% of global cities met WHO annual PM2.5 guideline of 5 µg/m³ in 2025 (down from 17% in 2024)
🔴 More 2024-25 Current Affairs
  • Temperature Inversion — Why Delhi’s Winter Smog Is So Bad: Cold air near ground gets trapped under a warm air layer above (inversion). This acts like a lid — pollutants cannot disperse upward. Combined with low wind speeds over the Indo-Gangetic Plain and moisture → dense smog. Worsens October–February every year.
  • Artificial Rain / Cloud Seeding (UPSC 2025 Prelims): UPSC 2025 asked — “Artificial way of causing rainfall to reduce air pollution makes use of…” — answer involves silver iodide/calcium chloride seeding. Delhi explored cloud seeding to reduce particulate pollution in November 2023.
  • India’s stubble burning 2024: Punjab fires counted in November 2024 — 38% of Delhi winter PM2.5 attributed to stubble burning. Happy Seeder machines (shred stubble instead of burning) promoted but adoption still limited.
  • Air pollution causes 2.1 million deaths in India annually (State of Global Air 2024 report) — making it India’s 2nd leading risk factor for mortality after high systolic blood pressure
  • Prolonged PM2.5 exposure cuts life expectancy by 5.2 years in India (Lancet Planetary Health study)
  • India’s Indoor Air Pollution: Household emissions from biomass burning contribute 30–50% of ambient PM2.5 year-round. Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) — LPG connections to BPL households — directly addresses this by replacing solid fuel cooking.

⭐ Air Pollution Master Cheat Sheet — UPSC Quickfire

  • India’s AQI: 8 pollutants (PM2.5, PM10, NO₂, SO₂, CO, O₃, NH₃, Pb) | Scale: 0–500 | Launched: Sep 2014 | By: CPCB + IIT Kanpur
  • NAAQS: 12 pollutants (AQI 8 + Benzene, Benzo(a)Pyrene, Arsenic, Nickel)
  • PM2.5 WHO limit: 5 µg/m³/year | India NAAQS: 40 µg/m³ | Delhi 2025: 82.2 µg/m³
  • PM2.5 enters: bloodstream | PM10 stops at: upper airways/throat
  • CO binds to Hb: 250× stronger than O₂ → forms COHb → oxygen starvation
  • Ozone: Good in stratosphere (UV shield) | Bad at ground level (lung irritant)
  • CFCs → destroy stratospheric ozone | Montreal Protocol 1987 — banned CFCs | Kigali Amendment 2016 — added HFCs
  • SO₂ → H₂SO₄ → acid rain | NOₓ → HNO₃ → acid rain | Acid rain = pH < 5.6
  • Taj Mahal yellowing: SO₂ + HNO₃ = “Marble Cancer”
  • Black carbon: SLCP; deposits on glaciers → reduces albedo → accelerates Himalayan glacier melt
  • Fly ash: from coal plants; India generates ~200 MT/year; mandatory use within 100 km of plants
  • Lead ban in petrol: India 2000
  • Benzene: In NAAQS (12) but NOT AQI (8) — classic UPSC trap
  • SAFAR: Ministry of Earth Sciences (NOT MoEFCC)
  • GRAP: For Delhi-NCR only | Stages 1–4 | By CAQM (est. 2021)
  • NCAP: Launched 2019 | Target: 40% PM reduction by 2026 | 131 cities | By CPCB
  • BS-VI: Implemented April 2020 — skipped BS-V | Ultra-low sulphur fuel ≤10 ppm
  • World Air Quality Report 2025: India ranked 6th most polluted | Delhi = world’s most polluted capital
  • Delhi 2025: Zero Good AQI days entire year | National avg: 48.9 µg/m³ (10× WHO)

🧪 Practice MCQs — Test Yourself
PYQUPSC 2016
Q1. In the cities of our country, which among the following atmospheric gases are normally considered in calculating the Air Quality Index? 1. Carbon dioxide 2. Carbon monoxide 3. Nitrogen dioxide 4. Sulphur dioxide 5. Methane
✅ Official Answer: (b) 2, 3 and 4 only
India’s National AQI measures 8 pollutants: PM2.5, PM10, NO₂ (nitrogen dioxide ✅), SO₂ (sulphur dioxide ✅), CO (carbon monoxide ✅), O₃ (ozone), NH₃ (ammonia), and Pb (lead). From the options: CO ✅, NO₂ ✅, SO₂ ✅. CO₂ (carbon dioxide) ❌ — NOT in AQI. CO₂ is a greenhouse gas, not a direct toxic air pollutant at ambient concentrations. Methane ❌ — NOT in AQI. Methane is a greenhouse gas and indirect ozone precursor but not directly measured in AQI. This question is asked repeatedly in different forms — remember: AQI = PM10 + PM2.5 + NO₂ + SO₂ + CO + O₃ + NH₃ + Pb. Not CO₂, not methane.
PYQUPSC 2022
In the context of WHO Air Quality Guidelines, consider the following statements: 1. The 24-hour mean of PM2.5 should not exceed 15 µg/m³ and the annual mean should not exceed 5 µg/m³. 2. In a year, the highest levels of ozone pollution occur during periods of inclement weather. 3. PM10 can penetrate the lung barrier and enter the bloodstream. 4. Excessive ozone in the air can trigger asthma. Which are correct?
✅ Official Answer: (b) 1 and 4 only
1 ✅ Correct: WHO guidelines: PM2.5 — annual mean ≤5 µg/m³; 24-hour mean ≤15 µg/m³. India NAAQS: 40 µg/m³ (annual) and 60 µg/m³ (24-hr) — both far higher than WHO. 2 ❌ Wrong: Highest ozone levels occur during hot, sunny weather (NOT “inclement/stormy weather”). Ground-level ozone forms from NOₓ + VOCs + sunlight. More sunlight = more ozone. Inclement (cloudy, rainy) weather actually reduces ozone. 3 ❌ Wrong: PM10 particles penetrate the throat and reach the lungs, but they cannot cross the lung barrier and enter the bloodstream. That privilege belongs only to PM2.5 (≤2.5 µm) which is small enough to cross the alveolar membrane. 4 ✅ Correct: Ground-level ozone is an irritant that triggers asthma — it inflames and narrows airways, causing wheezing and breathing difficulty.
Practice
Q3. The “Marble Cancer” of the Taj Mahal is caused by: 1. Sulphur dioxide from Mathura oil refinery reacting with marble 2. Nitrogen dioxide forming nitric acid deposits 3. Particulate matter settling on the marble surface 4. Carbon dioxide causing carbonation of calcium carbonate Select the answer that best explains the primary cause:
✅ Answer: (c) 1 and 2 — SO₂ and NO₂ cause Marble Cancer
“Marble Cancer” or “Stone Cancer” refers to the yellowing and blackening of the Taj Mahal’s white marble. It is caused by: SO₂ (sulphur dioxide — primarily from the Mathura oil refinery and nearby brick kilns) reacting with marble (CaCO₃) and moisture to form CaSO₄ (calcium sulphate) — a yellow/black crust. NO₂ forms nitric acid (HNO₃) which also attacks marble. The combined effect is acid deposition on the marble surface. The Supreme Court’s M.C. Mehta case (1986) ordered closure/relocation of polluting industries near the Taj Mahal Trapezium Zone (TTZ). Carbon dioxide (option 4) causes carbonation but this is a slow natural process — not the primary cause of the dramatic yellowing. Particulate matter (3) adds soot deposits (dark patches) but the chemical degradation is caused by acids from SO₂ and NOₓ.
Current Affairs2025
Q4. According to the World Air Quality Report 2025 released by IQAir, which of the following is correct about India? 1. India ranked as the most polluted country globally. 2. Delhi remained the world’s most polluted capital city. 3. India’s average PM2.5 was nearly 10 times the WHO guideline. 4. Loni, Uttar Pradesh was the most polluted region in India. Select the correct answer:
✅ Answer: (d) — 2, 3 and 4 only
1 ❌ Wrong: India ranked 6th most polluted country in 2025 — NOT 1st. The most polluted countries: Pakistan (67.3 µg/m³), Bangladesh (66.1), Tajikistan (57.3), Chad (53.6), DRC (50.2), India (48.9). 2 ✅: Delhi (82.2 µg/m³) remained the world’s most polluted capital city in 2025. 3 ✅: India’s national average PM2.5 was 48.9 µg/m³ against the WHO guideline of 5 µg/m³ — approximately 9.78 times (nearly 10×) above the WHO limit. 4 ✅: Loni, Uttar Pradesh was India’s most polluted region with PM2.5 of 112.5 µg/m³.
Practice
Q5. Consider the following about Black Carbon: 1. It is produced by complete combustion of fossil fuels. 2. It is classified as a Short-Lived Climate Pollutant (SLCP). 3. Its deposition on Himalayan glaciers reduces albedo and accelerates melting. 4. Black carbon has a higher warming effect than CO₂ per unit mass. Which are CORRECT?
✅ Answer: (c) — 2, 3 and 4 only
1 ❌ Wrong: Black carbon is produced by incomplete combustion — NOT complete combustion. Complete combustion of hydrocarbons produces CO₂ and H₂O. Incomplete combustion (insufficient oxygen) produces black carbon/soot, carbon monoxide (CO), and unburned hydrocarbons. This is why diesel engines, biomass burning, and chulhas (inefficient stoves) are major BC sources — they burn fuel incompletely. 2 ✅: BC is an SLCP — it remains in the atmosphere for days to weeks (compared to decades for CO₂), but has an intense short-term warming effect. 3 ✅: BC deposits on white/reflective glacier surfaces, turning them dark. Dark surfaces absorb more solar radiation (lower albedo) → accelerates melting. North Indian crop burning and biomass combustion is a documented source of BC reaching Himalayan glaciers. 4 ✅: Per unit mass, black carbon has a Global Warming Potential (GWP) much higher than CO₂ — though it stays in the atmosphere far less time. It is considered the 2nd most important climate forcer globally after CO₂.
Practice
Q6. SAFAR (System of Air Quality and Weather Forecasting and Research) is operated by which institution?
✅ Answer: (c) Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES)
SAFAR is a classic UPSC trap question. It is operated by the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) — NOT MoEFCC which handles pollution control generally. MoES handles weather forecasting and atmospheric science (IMD, INCOIS, IITM etc. all fall under MoES). SAFAR provides location-specific air quality forecasts for Delhi, Mumbai, Pune, and Ahmedabad. It tracks more pollutants than the AQI — including benzene, toluene, xylene, and mercury. The AQI (which covers 8 pollutants) is maintained by CPCB under MoEFCC. The key difference: AQI = MoEFCC/CPCB (regulatory, monitoring); SAFAR = MoES (forecasting, weather-linked air quality prediction).
📜 More UPSC PYQs
PYQUPSC 2025
Artificial way of causing rainfall to reduce air pollution makes use of which of the following?
✅ Official Answer: (c) Silver iodide and calcium chloride
Cloud seeding (artificial rainfall) uses two main agents: Silver Iodide (AgI) — the most common cloud seeding agent; has a crystal structure similar to ice, acting as an ice-nucleating agent; encourages supercooled water droplets to freeze around AgI particles, forming ice crystals that grow into raindrops. Calcium Chloride (CaCl₂) — a hygroscopic salt that absorbs atmospheric moisture; used for warm cloud seeding (below-freezing-point methods). Dry Ice (CO₂) is also used for cloud seeding but the UPSC option was silver iodide + calcium chloride. Context: In November 2023, Delhi government explored cloud seeding to generate artificial rainfall to wash down PM2.5 pollution. Several Indian cities and states (Rajasthan, UP) use cloud seeding for agricultural rainfall.
PYQUPSC 2019 Mains
Mains GS Paper 3 — What is the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP)? How does it address Delhi’s air quality crisis? [For Prelims practice] Which Stage of GRAP is triggered when Delhi’s AQI enters the “Severe” category (401–450)?
✅ Answer: (c) Stage 3 for AQI 401–450 (Severe)
GRAP’s 4 stages: Stage 1 (Poor, AQI 201–300): Mechanical road sweeping, water sprinkling, dust control at construction sites. Stage 2 (Very Poor, 301–400): Ban on coal/wood burning in industries/households, restrictions on diesel generators. Stage 3 (Severe, 401–450): Ban on BS-III petrol vehicles and BS-IV diesel vehicles in Delhi-NCR; construction work ban extended. Stage 4 (Severe+, >450): Consider school closures, work-from-home advisories, ban on trucks entering Delhi (except essentials), potential odd-even vehicle rationing. GRAP is implemented by CAQM (Commission for Air Quality Management), established 2021, which replaced EPCA (Environment Pollution Control Authority). GRAP is for Delhi-NCR only — other cities don’t have an equivalent emergency framework.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

The Indo-Gangetic Plain is geographically designed to trap air pollution: (1) Three-sided enclosure: The Himalayas block cold air from escaping northward. The Aravalli Range (though much reduced) provides a western barrier. The Vindhyas in the south. This creates a bowl-like shape where pollution accumulates. (2) Low wind speeds: The IGP lacks strong prevailing winds, especially in winter. Stagnant air means pollutants cannot disperse. (3) Temperature inversion: Cold, dense air near the surface gets trapped under a warmer air layer above — a meteorological lid that prevents vertical mixing. Pollutants pile up below this lid. (4) High moisture: Fog and moisture cause particles to grow larger and become visible as haze/smog. PM2.5 can absorb water vapour. (5) Convergence of sources: The IGP receives crop burning emissions from Punjab-Haryana, industrial emissions from UP, vehicular pollution from Delhi, and dust from Rajasthan — all converging in the same airshed. This is why CAQM was created — Delhi’s pollution is fundamentally a regional, not just city-level, problem.
In April 2020, India implemented BS-VI standards directly from BS-IV, skipping BS-V entirely. Reasons: (1) Emergency response to air quality crisis: India’s air quality data made it clear that incremental improvements were not sufficient — a major leap was needed. The Supreme Court had been actively pushing for cleaner fuels. (2) Technology leapfrog: BS-VI technology was already available globally. Going directly to BS-VI allowed India to adopt the best available technology rather than investing in intermediate BS-V upgrades that would soon be obsolete. (3) Economic logic: Automakers would have had to invest in BS-V technology and then upgrade again to BS-VI within a few years — two cycles of expensive retooling. A single jump was more economically efficient for the automobile industry. (4) Fuel compatibility: BS-VI vehicles require ultra-low sulphur fuel (≤10 ppm sulphur, down from 50 ppm in BS-IV). The fuel supply chain needed to be upgraded anyway — might as well do it once for BS-VI. BS-VI enables technologies like: Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) for NOₓ, Diesel Particulate Filters (DPFs) for PM, more advanced engine management systems.
Ozone (O₃) is a molecule of three oxygen atoms — and its behavior depends entirely on WHERE it is in the atmosphere: Dr Jekyll — Stratospheric Ozone (Good, 15–50 km altitude): Found in the ozone layer. Acts as Earth’s sunscreen — absorbs 97-99% of the sun’s harmful UV-B and UV-C radiation. Without it, UV radiation would cause massive increases in skin cancer, cataracts, crop damage, and would destroy marine food chains (phytoplankton can’t survive high UV). CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons — used in refrigerants, aerosols) destroy this ozone via catalytic reactions. The Montreal Protocol (1987) phased out CFCs. The ozone hole over Antarctica is slowly healing. Mr Hyde — Tropospheric/Ground-Level Ozone (Bad, in air we breathe): Forms when NOₓ + VOCs react in sunlight (photochemical reaction). It is a powerful lung irritant — causes chest pain, coughing, reduced lung function. Triggers asthma attacks. Damages crops (wheat is particularly sensitive — India loses millions of tonnes annually). Worsens on hot, sunny days — which is why summer afternoons have highest ozone in cities. The SAME molecule, the SAME chemical formula (O₃), but completely opposite effects depending on altitude. This is the most elegant example of “the dose and location make the poison” in environmental science.
Legacy IAS — UPSC Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  |  Data verified to April 2026. World Air Quality Report 2025 (IQAir) data included. Delhi 2025 zero good air days verified (AQI.in). CREA winter 2025-26 analysis (204/238 cities failing standards). GRAP 2023 updated 4-stage framework. BS-VI April 2020 implementation. CAQM established 2021. Cloud seeding UPSC 2025 prelims question included.

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