Air Pollution Emission Inventory, Source Apportionment and Atmospheric Carrying Capacity Study of the Howrah City in West Bengal

21 Apr 2026
Suresh Ramasubramanya Iye
Dheeraj Mehra
Laboni Pal
Prabhat Sharma
Justin Jacob
Runkob Srimani
Purbasha Das
Shaheen Hassan Dhawan

Air pollution in India is a major environmental issue vis-à-vis public issue, with over 70% of cities violating the statutory national atmospheric PM10 concentration. This pollution affects health, buildings, agriculture, and climate change, causing 2 million premature deaths and reportedly costing the country $95 billion annually. The Government of India launched the National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) in 2019 with an interim target of 40% reduction in atmospheric PM10 in the non-attainment cities by 2026 w.r.t. 2017. “Glasgow of India”, Howrah, along with five other cities from West Bengal, are listed in the catalogue of non-attainment cities together with another 129 cities across the nation under the NCAP based on atmospheric PM10 concentrations in five consecutive years. Comprehensive air quality action plans for Kolkata and Howrah cities were developed in 2018 following an order of the honourable NGT, involving detailed source apportionment and inventory studies. Following this, the CSIR-NEERI conducted source apportionment study on ambient PM10 and PM2.5 in Kolkata, identifying vehicle, road dust, and coal combustion as major sources. They suggested periodic evaluation of source apportionment, however, they could not apportion the share of sources outside the HMC area.

In 2022, the West Bengal Pollution Control Board (WBPCB) commissioned The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), New Delhi to conduct an updated Air Pollution Source Apportionment and Atmospheric Carrying Capacity Study in Howrah Municipal Corporation areas to assess the impact of ongoing air pollution management activities. The scope of the study was to assess Ground Level Concentration (GLC) of air pollutants, prepare a gridded inventory of pollutants from various sources, conduct source apportionment studies, assess atmospheric carrying capacity, and develop a roadmap for sectors to reduce atmospheric PM10 and PM2.5 concentrations in the HMC area.

Themes
Tags
Air pollution control
Air pollution modelling
Partners
West Bengal Pollution Control Board
Kolkata University
Stakeholders
Policy Makers
Researchers/Post graduates