Relevance: GS-III (Environment, Pollution) | Indian Express; Source: recent scientific studies, air-quality assessments

Context

Recent studies show that a large share of PM2.5 pollution in India, especially over the Indo-Gangetic Plain, now comes from secondary aerosols, mainly ammonium sulphate, rather than only from direct (primary) emissions.

Core Concept 

PM2.5 refers to fine particles (≤2.5 microns) that can enter the lungs and bloodstream.
Secondary aerosols are not emitted directly; they form in the atmosphere when gases react chemically.

Formation pathway :

  • Coal-based power plants and industries → Sulphur dioxide
  • Agriculture, fertilisers, waste → Ammonia
  • Atmospheric reactions (high humidity, winter inversion) → Ammonium sulphate particles (PM2.5)

Why It Matters for India

  • Winter pollution peaks in North India are increasingly driven by atmospheric chemistry, not just visible smoke.
  • Even with control on vehicles and stubble burning, PM2.5 remains high due to sulphur dioxide and ammonia interaction.
  • Indicates limits of city-centric pollution control.

Policy Implications

  • Faster installation of flue gas desulphurisation in thermal power plants.
  • Better fertiliser and waste management to reduce ammonia.
  • Shift to airshed-based regulation under the National Clean Air Programme.

One-line takeaway: India’s PM2.5 challenge is increasingly driven by invisible chemical reactions in the air, not only by direct emission sources.

UPSC Value Box

  • Key Concept: Secondary aerosol – particulate matter formed in the atmosphere from gaseous precursors, not emitted directly.
  • Key Pollutants: Sulphur dioxide (industry, coal power) + Ammonia (agriculture, waste).
  • Policy Framework: National Clean Air Programme – aims at air-quality improvement but needs stronger airshed-based control.

UPSC Prelims Question

Q. Secondary particulate matter such as ammonium sulphate in PM2.5 is mainly formed due to reactions between:
A. Carbon monoxide and nitrogen
B. Sulphur dioxide and ammonia
C. Methane and ozone
D. Carbon dioxide and water vapour

Answer: B

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