Centre Issues One-Week Ultimatum To Improve Delhi-NCR Air Quality
Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav has directed authorities in Delhi and the wider National Capital Region to roll out a **time‑bound action plan** that delivers visible improvement in air quality within a week, amid yet another spell of thick winter smog and “very poor” to “severe” Air Quality Index (AQI) levels. The directions were issued after a high‑level review meeting with senior officials from Delhi, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, as well as municipal bodies, police and pollution control boards.
Key Orders: Dust, Traffic And Polluting Units
In its communiqué, the Environment Ministry called for **intensive mechanical sweeping and water sprinkling** on major roads and construction corridors, removal of loose construction and demolition (C&D) waste, and strict enforcement of bans on open burning and illegal dumping. Agencies have also been told to seal unauthorised tyre‑burning units and other non‑compliant industrial establishments across Delhi‑NCR, and to fast‑track installation of Online Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems (OCEMS) in identified polluting units, especially in Haryana.
The Ministry has further directed smooth **traffic management at 62 congestion hot spots**, promotion of electric/CNG buses for corporate and industrial employees, and consideration of staggered timings for offices, malls and commercial hubs to cut peak‑hour emissions. Enforcement teams have been asked to intensify checks on visibly polluting vehicles and ensure strict compliance with the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) stages already in force.
Monthly Reviews From January 2026
Yadav announced that starting **January 2026**, the Centre will hold **monthly ministerial review meetings** on Delhi‑NCR air pollution to track implementation of state‑level action plans and remove inter‑state coordination bottlenecks. These sessions will bring together senior officials from transport, urban development, power, agriculture and industries to ensure that measures taken by one state are not undermined by inaction in another.
The Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) will continue to issue and update GRAP orders, including Stage‑III and Stage‑IV restrictions such as curbs on construction, brick kilns, diesel generator sets and entry of non‑essential trucks whenever AQI hits the “severe” or “severe+” range.
Public Grievances And Citizen Role
The Environment Ministry has asked agencies to ensure **coordinated redressal of public grievances** related to pollution sources, under CAQM’s supervision, alongside focused information and awareness campaigns. Residents have been urged to report violations like garbage burning, visible industrial emissions and uncovered construction material through state helplines and mobile apps so that enforcement teams can act quickly.
Officials admit that weather conditions in winter make Delhi’s air harder to clean, but stress that aggressive, coordinated action on traffic, dust, waste and industrial emissions over the next few days will be crucial to prevent AQI from slipping into prolonged “severe+” territory.

