NEW DELHI :
DELHI, one of the most polluted
cities in India, has used less than
one-third of the funds it received
under the National Clean Air
Programme (NCAP), according
to Government records.
Launched in 2019, the NCAP is
India’s first national plan to set
clean air targets. It aims to reduce
PM10 pollution by 40 per cent in
130 highly polluted cities by 2026,
using 2019-20 as the base year.
Environment Ministry data
showed that Delhi spent just Rs
13.94 crore, 32.65 per cent of the
Rs 42.69 crore released to it under
the NCAP. A total of 14 cities and
urban agglomerations have
spent less than 50 per cent of the
funds they received under the
programme, either directly from
the Environment Ministry or
through the 15th Finance
Commission.
Noida in Uttar Pradesh, another major pollution hotspot in the
National Capital Region, has
spent only Rs 3.44 crore of the
Rs 30.89 crore given to it for air
pollution control. Faridabad in
Haryana spent Rs 28.60 crore of
the Rs 107.14 crore it received.
Visakhapatnam in Andhra
Pradesh used Rs 39.42 crore out
of the Rs 129.25 crore allocated
to it. Jalandhar in Punjab spent
Rs 17.65 crore of the Rs 45.44
crore given to it, while Gulbarga
in Karnataka used Rs 8.98 crore
of the Rs 23.48 crore it received.
Other cities with low utilisation include Pathankot (37.1 per
cent), Ujjain (37.7 per cent),
Karnataka’s Devanagere (43.6 per
cent), Assam’s Nagaon (48.5 per
cent), Vijayawada (41.09 per
cent), Jamshedpur (44.24 per
cent) and Varanasi (48.85 per
cent). Of the total Rs 12,636 crore
allocated to 130 cities under the
NCAP since its launch, only Rs
8,981 crore, around 71 per cent