According to the Pollution Control Department (PCD), the concentration of PM2.5 pollutants in Bang Phlat reached 53 microgrammes per cubic metre (µg/m³) yesterday – a exceeding the PCD’s safe threshold of 50 µg/m³.
Air quality indicators in other areas in Bangkok and parts of Samut Prakan and Samut Sakhon also registered PM2.5 levels ranging between 40 µg/m³ on Charoen Nakhon Road in Khlong San district and 49 µg/m³ in Bang Sue district.
The PCD said PM2.5 levels are likely to increase in the next couple of days across the city, and warned residents about the health risks posed by the micro pollutant.
Officials said a high pressure system above China – which has lowered temperatures in the northern part of Thailand – s causing dust to accumulate as the air stagnates.
While Bangkok has not registered unhealthy levels of PM2.5 pollutants in the past several months, earlier in the year PM2.5 concentrations soared beyond unhealthy levels, prompting officials to adopt emergency measures – including spraying water from high-rise buildings.
A Palang Pracharath MP for Bangkok, Pada Vorakanon, on Wednesday urged the government to act before the situation turns critical.
“Why should we wait until that day comes – when masks and air filters become expensive because they are in such short supply that they're next to impossible to get?” she said.
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