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Updated Oct 21, 2025 · 17:43
Punjab News Updated Oct 21, 2025

Post-Diwali Air Crisis: Punjab and Haryana Face Severe Pollution Spike

After Diwali celebrations, air quality in Punjab and Haryana has plummeted to severe and hazardous levels. Cities like Bathinda and Sonipat recorded alarming AQI readings above 240. Interestingly, both states reported significantly fewer farm fire incidents compared to previous years. Experts attribute the pollution spike to winds carrying pollutants across the region.

Post Diwali, AQI in Punjab, Haryana drops to severe, hazardous categories

Chandigarh, Oct 21

After Diwali, the air quality in most parts of Punjab and Haryana dropped to the 'severe' and 'hazardous' categories on Tuesday.

According to AQI.in, a platform monitoring air quality index (AQI), Chandigarh recorded "poor" air quality at 146. An AQI between zero and 50 is considered 'good', 51 and 100 'satisfactory', 101 and 200 'moderate', 201 and 300 'poor', 301 and 400 'very poor', 401 and 450 'severe' and above 450 'severe plus'.

In Punjab, the AQI was registered at 209 in Ludhiana, 225 in Amritsar, 198 in Jalandhar, 242 in Bathinda and 233 in Patiala. In another agrarian state, the AQI in Faridabad was 247 and 343 in Sonipat, 201 in Karnal, 328 in Bhiwani, 247 in Jind and 279 in Charkhi Dadri. Both Punjab and Haryana have been blamed for the rise in air pollution levels owing to farm fires.

However, this year both Punjab and Haryana recorded much fewer farm fires compared to the previous years. Punjab reported 45 incidents of stubble burning on Monday, a slight decrease from the record 67 farm fires reported on October 19, the highest so far this season.

Tarn Taran and Amritsar districts accounted for the majority of such cases, according to the Punjab Pollution Control Board data.

Haryana saw 30 farm fire cases till October 17, compared to 601 incidents during the same period last year. The corresponding figures were 546 in 2023, 330 in 2022, and 1,026 in 2021, a consistent decline in the stubble burning practice.

As per district-wise data, Jind has reported the highest number of cases (nine), followed by Sirsa and Sonepat with four each, Faridabad (three) and Kaithal, Panipat, and Yamunanagar (two each).

Stubble burning in Punjab and Haryana is often blamed for the rise in air pollution in Delhi-NCR. A pollution expert blamed the spike in AQI in Chandigarh to winds circulating over Punjab and Haryana, carrying pollution from nearby areas, that passed through Chandigarh.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

The data clearly shows farm fires have reduced significantly compared to previous years. Why are we still blaming farmers when Diwali firecrackers are the main culprit here? The timing matches perfectly with the pollution spike.

Anjali F

My asthma has been terrible since yesterday. Had to keep my children indoors. We need stricter enforcement on both firecrackers and stubble burning. Public health should be the priority! 🌫️

Michael C

Living in Chandigarh and the air quality has been really concerning. While the article mentions reduced farm fires, we need to acknowledge that multiple factors contribute - vehicular pollution, construction dust, and industrial emissions all play a role.

Siddharth J

Respectfully, I think we're missing the point. The government has provided subsidies for happy seeders and other equipment, but implementation is slow. Farmers need more support and alternatives, not just blame. The reduction in farm fires shows progress is happening.

Kavya N

Every year same story after Diwali! We need to evolve our traditions. My family celebrated with diyas and sweets only - had a wonderful time without contributing to pollution. Traditions can adapt for better health! 🪔

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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