INDO-GANGETIC PLAIN: SHROUDED IN MASS MISERY
Every year, about this time, we need to remind the leaders of society, academia and SAARC, about the Indo-Gangetic fog. Himal raised the matter a year ago ("Huddled masses, yearning for warmth", February 2001), and it should be repeated now, even though the prime ministers and presidents are probably not listening. This is truly a 'regional' problem.
There is increased incidence of the fog in the plains of the Indus and Ganga, due to the expansion of embankments, dykes, barrages, irrigation canals – and eveything else that leaves more water lying around on the ground in the winter months than what is natural. When the air temperature drops, these water bodies release mists and fogs, which then hug the ground and do not disperse for days, weeks and, in bad winters, a month or more.