Chennai Corporation hopes to reduce air pollution with new traffic management plan
The Hindu
The civic body hopes to improve air quality by reducing idling time of vehicles through dynamic artificial intelligence system and consequently reduce the pollution at 184 junctions
After the Centre flagged the issue of rising air pollution, the Greater Chennai Corporation and other line agencies are set to focus on improving air quality with initiatives such as the integrated traffic management system.
A senior official of the Corporation said the JICA-funded integrated traffic management system project will include more innovative aspects to improve air quality by reducing the idling time of vehicles through dynamic artificial intelligence system and consequently reduce the pollution at 184 junctions across the city.
In addition to the 30 pollution sensors installed by the integrated command and control centre (ICCC), the civic body plans to integrate and monitor data from pollution sensors managed by various civic agencies, universities and private agencies and declaring no pollution zones near schools.
The Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change recently flagged the issue of “non attainment” of pollution reduction targets in Chennai under the National Clean Air Programme, sources said. PM2.5, the smaller particles that affect public health, have reportedly not been monitored in all areas of Chennai, owing to lack of equipment and the city has not listed and quantified all major sources of pollution.
Meanwhile, the Corporation is working on finding a lasting solution to the problem of poor air quality near garbage dumpyards.
“We are doing biomining in Perungudi and focusing on pollution reduction in the long term. Of the six packages, 95% work has been completed in three packages. Biomining of all the legacy garbage will be over next year and air quality will improve in the area. We are going in for fresh biomining at Kodungaiyur. That will reduce the atmospheric pollution from legacy garbage in north Chennai,” an official said.
“In March, bidding for biomining will start. We are putting up bio CNG plants at Chetpet, Kodungaiyur and near Madhavaram, each with a capacity to convert 100 tonnes of wet waste to bio CNG, which will mitigate the pollution due to carbon gases,” said the official.
Tapping ‘neera’, a sweet nutrient-rich sap derived from coconut spathe, using the Coco-sap Chiller developed by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR)-Central Plantation Crops Research Institute (CPCRI), Kasaragod, Kerala, has raised the hopes of farmers in earning income from coconut trees, even while keeping monkeys at bay.
The films presented at the Sci560 Film Festival were selected through an open call and curated by a jury composed of members from the Bangalore Film Forum and the SGB team. The festival’s screenings highlight various aspects of Bengaluru, from its urban landscape to its technological advances and deep-rooted scientific traditions.