Published on: December 27, 2025

ONE-THIRD OF DELHI’S PM2.5 POLLUTION IS SECONDARY AMMONIUM SULFATE: CREA ANALYSIS

ONE-THIRD OF DELHI’S PM2.5 POLLUTION IS SECONDARY AMMONIUM SULFATE: CREA ANALYSIS

NEWS  – A new analysis by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) finds that nearly one-third of Delhi’s annual PM2.5 pollution comes from secondary ammonium sulfate, formed through atmospheric chemical reactions driven largely by SO₂ emissions from coal plants, industries, and ammonia from agriculture.

KEY FINDINGS

  • Secondary ammonium sulfate forms when:
    • SO₂ → sulfate → reacts with ammonia → ammonium sulfate
  • Shares of ammonium sulfate in Delhi PM2.5:
    • 49% in post-monsoon
    • 41% in winter
    • 21% in summer/monsoon
  • India: World’s largest SO₂ emitter (~11.2 million tonnes)
  • Severe pollution episodes are region-driven, not only local

MAJOR STATES WITH HIGH SECONDARY PM2.5

  • Chhattisgarh – 42%
  • Odisha – 41%
  • Jharkhand, Telangana – 40%
  • Bihar – 39%
  • Maharashtra, AP, West Bengal – 38%
  • Uttar Pradesh, MP – 37%

KEY ISSUES TO PONDER

Sources of Ammonium Sulfate

  • Coal power plants (SO₂)
  • Industries
  • Agriculture (ammonia emissions)
  • Atmospheric humidity accelerates formation

Impact on Health

  • PM2.5 penetrates lungs → bloodstream
  • Causes:
    • Asthma, bronchitis
    • Heart disease
    • Respiratory disorders
  • SO₂ exposure:
    • Cardiovascular risk
    • Respiratory illness
    • Damages vegetation

Measuring Air Pollution

  • PM2.5 concentration (µg/m³)
  • Air Quality Index (AQI)
  • Satellite emission tracking

Why PM2.5 is Dangerous

  • Tiny size → bypass nose & throat
  • Remains suspended in air
  • Long-term chronic exposure risk

STEPS NEEDED TO CURB SO₂ EMISSIONS

  • Strict enforcement of Flue Gas Desulphurisation (FGD) in power plants
  • Transition to cleaner fuels
  • Agricultural ammonia management
  • Industrial emission standards
  • Regional coordination (since pollution is transboundary)

MAJOR CAUSES OF AIR POLLUTION IN INDIA

  • Thermal power plants
  • Industrial emissions
  • Vehicular pollution
  • Biomass burning
  • Construction dust
  • Agricultural burning
  • Secondary particulate formation (chemically formed)

DO YOU KNOW

  • PM2.5 = particles <2.5 microns
  • Enter bloodstream → systemic health risk
  • India records up to 42% PM2.5 as secondary chemical formation