
Since 2016, Delhi has experienced public health emergencies more than 9 times. It has been observed that the situation always worsens the day after Diwali, and interestingly, Delhi residents express regret about this situation to a great extent. But when the next Diwali comes, they don’t remember it at all and the situation becomes worse than before.
On the morning of October 21, 2025, Delhi once again woke up to the same horrific scenes that have become common for many years after Diwali. There was a suffocating blanket of smog and smoke everywhere. The poison that began to slowly dissolve amid the sound and light of firecrackers on Diwali night had contributions from court restrictions, administrative failures, and public stubbornness. The result was that by 6 AM the day after Diwali, the Air Quality Index (AQI) in many areas of the capital had risen above 720.
While Delhi’s AQI was 298 one day before Diwali on October 19, 2025, meaning pollution in Delhi increased by more than 200 percent the day after Diwali. When viewed through the lens of World Health Organization standards, this was 45 times higher than acceptable pollution levels. The air pollution situation in Delhi the day after Diwali was so severe that visibility in many areas of the capital such as Safdarjung, Anand Vihar, Narela, and Punjabi Bagh dropped to less than 100 meters.
According to the Environmental Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority, this was the worst morning after Diwali in the past 5 years. Until now, 2021 was considered the most polluted morning after Diwali, with an AQI recorded at 556. Whereas on the morning of October 21, 2025, it was in the most severe category of 720. Although joint teams of the Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC) and police patrolled throughout the night, in just the first three hours, more than 2,700 people were found violating the permission granted by the court, while this number increased to more than 50,000 throughout the night.
Severe Air Pollution in Delhi Due to Green Firecrackers
This gives an indication of how fatal the Supreme Court’s permission for limited time green firecrackers in Delhi between 8-10 PM proved to be. By the morning of October 21, 2025, the number of patients arriving at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) experiencing breathing difficulties was 40 to 50 percent higher than usual, with children and elderly being the majority.
Although the Directorate of Education also banned physical classes in Delhi government schools for the next two days considering the severity of pollution. But despite all this, the misuse of court permission by Delhi residents was devastating. ISRO’s MODIS satellite recorded a 10 percent decrease in stubble burning incidents in Punjab and Haryana between October 19-21, 2025.