Bangkok under environmental siege
Bangkok, the capital of Thailand has a population of around 10 million people in the urban sections and more than 15 million in the metropolitan area. Its growth is the consequence of internal migration in Thailand and immigration from neighboring countries.
Many individuals in Bangkok have a connection with the Thai ethnicity. There are a couple of groups in the country as an outcome of migration. This incorporates the Vietnamese, Lao and Mon. The most known ethnic gatherings are the Chinese, who were 75% of the city’s population in 1828, which dropped to half by the 1950s. The Chinese community is situated in Yaowarat, which is otherwise called the Chinatown of Bangkok. There is an Indian community as well in Phahurt.
The rapid growth has created serious environmental problems, the periodic floods related to its low topography and sinking due to groundwater pumping and lately air contamination producen thick smog. A brief description of Bangkok's smog in the following article.
Smog in Bangkok
The small park in Bangkok's Rama
III district is mostly popular with runners circling its neatly trimmed garden
track to the sound of birdsong.
But on Thursday, they were joined by a convoy of fire
trucks and half a dozen military drones, drawing dozens of curious onlookers.
After an hour setting up, the drones and water cannon were
pumping thick plumes of water into the empty sky above. Speakers blared
warnings about the operation and instructed runners to keep their distance.
The odd display was the Thai government's latest attempt at
curbing the alarmingly high levels of pollution that
have been plaguing the capital for weeks. The drones, geared with water tanks
and fire-fighting sprinklers, were supposed to break up the smog that has been
smothering the city of around 10 million people for at least a month.
Initially, Thailand's
authorities said the worsening pollution was being blown over from China,
predicting that it would be gone within a week or so. Then, as the smog
persisted, they tried cloud seeding. Now, drones and water cannon are their
latest salvo.
"Do they actually think this is going to help?"
asked Gong, a 50-year-old man who comes to the park often to use its
free-weight gym.
"The only thing happening today is that runners are
getting wet and they have to watch out for these drones," he said, drawing
laughter from weightlifters nearby.
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Thailand deployed water cannon and drones to a local park
in Bangkok to try and disperse the toxic smog that's been hanging over the
city for weeks [Caleb Quinley/Al Jazeera]
|
Toxic air
As amusing as they might have found the scene, Bangkok
residents are welcoming any attempts to combat the toxic smog that has forced
authorities to close more than 400 schools, advise people to wear a mask when
they're not indoors and limit the time they spend outside.
New research from Thailand's National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA) suggests Bangkok's air has reached particularly concerning levels of toxicity, with the lingering smog being full of dangerous heavy metals and various carcinogenic compounds.
New research from Thailand's National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA) suggests Bangkok's air has reached particularly concerning levels of toxicity, with the lingering smog being full of dangerous heavy metals and various carcinogenic compounds.
Professor Siwatt Pongpiachan, director of NIDA and a global
leading expert on urban pollution, told Al Jazeera he was concerned to find
that Bangkok's air contained dangerous levels of cadmium, tungsten, arsenic and
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) inside the fine dust air, known as PM
2.5.
Siwatt explained that their levels are particularly
dangerous, based on the World Health Organization's (WHO) standards for
measuring safe air, adding that Bangkok's pollution was largely coming from
within the city itself.
|
Drones have been used as part of Thailand's efforts to
shift the smog that's settled over the city [Caleb Quinley/Al Jazeera]
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PAHs are toxic carcinogenic compounds that can be sourced
to forest fires, car exhausts, cigarette smoke and insecticides, among others.
The Thai capital, meanwhile, has some 10 million registered
vehicles, pollutant-pumping factories and numerous daily cremations.
Siwatt said the widespread burning of sugarcane fields in
northern provinces is also contributing to the crisis, which makes tackling the
problem extremely difficult.
The WHO has been campaigning to decrease toxic pollution
around the globe for years, educating the public on the dangers to health and
urging governments to prioritise clean air as megacities such as New Delhi and
Beijing struggle with debilitating levels of pollution. Its guideline for
PM2.5 is for an annual average of no more than 10 micrograms/cubic metre.
'Sense of urgency'
Bangkok has never seen pollution on this scale, and many
residents were shocked at the smog lurking above. On social media, where Thais
often go to express their outrage, memes comparing the city to post-apocalyptic
backdrops in films such as Bladerunner 2049 and Mad Max have been widely
shared.
Many are concerned the government is focusing on the
symptoms rather than the cause of the problem.
"I think we need to push the government with a sense
of urgency if we want to see positive results," said Sirima
Panyametheekul, an academic in the Department of Environmental Engineering at
Thailand's Chulalongkorn University. "We need urgent measures to be
implemented, like reducing the density of traffic and cleaning the
streets."
Thailand also needs to adopt more stringent measures for
PM2.5, she added.
The density of the microscopic particles can reach 50
micrograms for each cubic metre volume before the government has to act,
according to Sirima, who recommends that level be halved.
Currently, air quality is sitting around 61 to 93
micrograms/cubic metre depending on the location.
"I know that's challenging," she said. "But
it's important. If not 25, we can at least start at 35 or 30."
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Women covering their face with protective masks at a bus
stop in heavily polluted Bangkok last month [File: Sakchai Lalit/AP]
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Need for legislation
The government, which dropped a plan to use sugar water
that was supposed to "capture" the toxins, stands by its approach to
the current air crisis.
"It's going to work," said Somjiak Nonthagaew,
the director of Bangkok's Fire and Rescue Department, on deploying drones and
fire-fighting equipment to combat the smog.
"It should definitely help, but of course not 100
percent. We would have liked to do more, but we have limited options and
resources. But we sprayed at six locations today, and we think it was a
success," added Nonthagaew, between shouting loud updates into his phone
as the mist began to descend over the park.
But Siwatt is not convinced.
He says Thailand needs to develop policies that would
reduce the toxic compounds in the air, citing neighbouring countries such as
Singapore and the Philippines. He's also urging authorities to introduce a
Clean Air Act, like the one the British government rolled out after the deadly
1952 London Smog, which blanketed the UK capital for several days.
Thai authorities say that the current smog should lift in a
few days as a result of their tackling operations. According to Somjiak, they
plan to deploy water cannons and drones until the air quality improves.
But without major changes, the smog is bound to return.
"It's going to take a few years before we see any
Clean Air Act laws," Siwatt said. "And before thinking about the
timeframe, we need to convince the government and all the future political
parties to agree that Thailand really needs clean air."
Reference:
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/02/bangkok-chokes-pollution-busting-efforts-falter-190201040547251.html

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