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Delhi Schools To Be Closed For Two Days As Air Quality Deteriorates

Schools in Delhi and adjoining districts have been advised to remain shut for the next two days due to the spike in pollution levels.

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Delhi schools closed: Air Quality Index is back to severe, holiday announced for Thursday and Friday.
New Delhi:

The schools in the national capital will be closed on Thursday and Friday, the Delhi government announced on Wednesday following an order from the Supreme Court-mandated anti-pollution authority EPCA as the air quality hovered close to 'emergency' levels. "In view of deteriorating air quality because of pollution due to stubble burning in Uttar Pradesh, Delhi government has decided to close schools tomorrow and day after," Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia tweeted. 

The Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority also extended the ban on hot-mix plants and stone-crushers in Delhi-NCR till November 15. 

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The apex court had on November 4 banned construction and demolition activities in the region till further orders.

Schools in Delhi and adjoining districts have been advised to remain shut for the next two days due to the spike in pollution levels. 

All coal and other fuel-based industries, which have not shifted to natural gas or agro-residue, will remain shut in Faridabad, Gurugram, Ghaziabad, Noida, Bahadurgarh, Bhiwadi, Greater Noida, Sonepat and Panipat till November 15, it said. 

In Delhi, industries which have not yet shifted to piped natural gas, will not operate during the period. 

Early this month, the Delhi government shut all schools for four days after EPCA declared a public health emergency in the Delhi-NCR region in the wake of rising pollution level. 

The schools reopened on November 5 after the air quality had improved. 

The city's overall air quality index read 456 at 4 pm, up from 425 at 4 pm on Tuesday. 

Rohini and Dwarka Sector-8 were the most-polluted areas with an AQI of 494, followed by Nehru Nagar (491) and Jahangirpuri (488). Faridabad (448), Ghaziabad (481), Greater Noida (472), Gurgaon (445) and Noida (479) also choked on extremely polluted air.

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(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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