Delhi NCR

Delhi govt exploring collaboration with IIT-Kanpur to find pollution sources using AI: Sirsa

Published by
Tahir Bhat

The Delhi government is exploring a potential collaboration with IIT Kanpur to leverage Artificial Intelligence to identify pollution sources at a granular level and assess their impact, officials said.

The environment department is all set to deliberate on the roadmap for collaboration, institutional mechanisms and phased implementation, an official statement said.

Speaking on the initiative, Delhi Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa said, “We are moving towards a model where decisions are driven by real-time data, source identification and measurable outcomes, not reactive measures.”

The proposed collaboration aims to strengthen Delhi’s ability to identify pollution sources at a granular level, assess their impact, and enable targeted, timely interventions across sectors.

The emphasis is on building systems that can monitor, analyse, forecast and guide action on a continuous basis, he said.

A key pillar of this approach is dynamic source apportionment, which will help authorities scientifically identify contributions from dust, transport, industry, biomass burning and regional factors.

This evidence will enable agencies to act at the source of pollution, rather than resorting to blanket bans and reactive measures, Sirsa added.

The proposed collaboration also emphasises on multi-agency coordination, to ensure that municipal bodies, district administrations, enforcement agencies and technical institutions operate on a shared data platform with clearly defined roles and accountability.

“When every agency works from the same scientific evidence, action becomes faster, sharper and more effective. This is how we are aiming to transformation Delhi from firefighting to actual prevention,” Sirsa said.

The Delhi government is acting simultaneously on four key fronts-vehicular emissions, dust control, polluting industries, and waste management-with round-the-clock interventions by civic agencies.

Also Read: Delhi: Finding the silver lining in a year of transition

Strict dust norms at construction sites, mechanical road sweeping, anti-smog guns, and mist spray systems on electric poles are tackling airborne particles effectively.

Closure actions against polluting industries are underway through surveys led by District Magistrates and Divisional Commissioners, while intensified waste picking from streets and bio-mining at all landfill sites process approximately 35 MT of legacy waste daily, significantly reducing waste mountains.

Tahir Bhat

Tahir is the Chief Sub-Editor at Patriot and hails from north Kashmir's Kupwara district. He holds a postgraduate degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from the University of Kashmir. His previous stints in the field of journalism over the past eight years include serving as online editor at Kashmir Life, where he covered a range of political and human-interest stories. At Patriot, he has expanded his focus to encompass the lifestyle and arts scene in Delhi, even as he has taken on additional responsibilities at the desk. If there’s news about Kashmir in Delhi, Tahir is the person to turn to for perspective and reportage. Outside of journalism, he loves travelling and exploring new places.

Published by
Tahir Bhat
Tags: delhi

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