Updated On: 08 November, 2022 08:14 AM IST | Mumbai | Dipti Singh
If Maharashtra does not reduce the thermal power plants and act on other sources of aerosol, the contamination could enter red zone, says a study

High levels of aerosol contaminants cause asthma and bronchitis, say doctors. File pic/Ashish Raje
Every year, studies are published, highlighting the contaminants in the air and how they clog our lungs. However, according to a latest study, aerosol pollution in Maharashtra is anticipated to move from its current ‘vulnerable’ orange zone to the ‘highly vulnerable’ red zone in 2023. It has attributed the probable rise to majorly thermal power plants.
The study: ‘A deep insight into state-level aerosol pollution in India’, by researchers Dr Abhijit Chatterjee and his PhD scholar Monami Dutta from Bose Institute in Kolkata, was published in the peer-reviewed journal Elsevier (an academic publishing company that publishes medical and scientific literature) in August.