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Bite the dust

If you thought the air you are breathing in Mumbai city is poor, Uran has it worse. Sandwiched between a state-of-the-art in-construction airport, a chemical refinery, bottling plants and the second largest container port in the country, it is trapped in an apocalyptic cloud

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Dense smog hangs over the highway connecting Belapur to Uran. It’s fringed by hillocks that are being blasted multiple times in a day to make room for the Navi Mumbai airport. Pic/Ashish Raje

Dense smog hangs over the highway connecting Belapur to Uran. It’s fringed by hillocks that are being blasted multiple times in a day to make room for the Navi Mumbai airport. Pic/Ashish Raje

Bokadvira is still and quiet when we visit it early on Thursday afternoon. Most of the working population has headed out, leaving behind the children, the elderly and homemakers. They are not alone. They are enveloped in a cloud of smog that sits heavy in the atmosphere around, clearly visible to anyone who looks up. 

On this day, Bokadvira and 48 surrounding villages that make up the Uran taluka registered an air quality index (AQI) of 300, considered “hazardous air quality” according to AQI India’s website. The private air-monitoring initiative detects and reports invisible air particulate in the environment, noise pollution and humidity levels. 

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