Lahore most polluted city on earth, Agra’s toxic smog hides Taj Mahal

A general view shows the Taj Mahal amid smoggy conditions in Agra on October 25, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 14 November 2024
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Lahore most polluted city on earth, Agra’s toxic smog hides Taj Mahal

  • Smog obscured India’s famed monument to love, the Taj Mahal, and Sikhism’s holiest shrine, Golden Temple in Amritsar
  • Delhi flights faced delays, with tracking website Flightradar24 showing 88 percent departures and 54% of arrivals were delayed

NEW DELHI: Toxic smog obscured India’s famed monument to love, the Taj Mahal, as well as Sikhism’s holiest shrine, the Golden Temple in Amritsar, and delayed flights on Thursday, becoming too thick to see through in several places.

The city of Lahore in neighboring Pakistan ranked as the world’s most polluted in winter’s annual scourge across the region, worsened by dust, emissions, and smoke from fires burnt illegally in India’s farming states of Punjab and Haryana.

In the city of Agra, the Taj Mahal was barely visible from the gardens in front of the 17th-century monument, while dense fog wreathed worshippers at the Golden Temple in Punjab, television images showed.

Delhi flights faced delays, with tracking website Flightradar24 showing 88 percent of departures and 54 percent of arrivals were delayed.

Officials blamed high pollution, combined with humidity, becalmed winds and a drop in temperature for the smog, which cut visibility to 300 m (980 ft) at the city’s international airport, which diverted flights in zero visibility on Wednesday.

More patients flocked to hospitals, particularly children.

“There has been a sudden increase in children with allergies, cough and cold ... and a rise in acute asthma attacks,” Sahab Ram, a paediatrician in Punjab’s Fazilka region, told news agency ANI.

Delhi’s minimum temperature fell to 16.1 degrees Celsius (61°F) on Thursday from 17 degrees C (63 degrees F) the previous day, weather officials said.

Its pollution ranked in the ‘severe’ category for the second consecutive day, with a score of 430 on an index of air quality maintained by the top pollution panel that rates a score of zero to 50 as ‘good’.

Pollution in New Delhi is likely to stay in the ‘severe’ category on Friday, the earth sciences ministry said, before improving to ‘very poor’, or an index score of 300 to 400.

The number of farm fires to clear fields in northern India has risen steadily this week to almost 2,300 on Wednesday from 1,200 on Monday, the ministry’s website showed.

Lahore, the capital of Pakistan’s eastern province of Punjab, was rated the world’s most polluted city on Thursday, in live rankings kept by Swiss group IQAir. Authorities there have also battled hazardous air this month. 


Pakistan lets oil companies regulate supply to curb hoarding amid Gulf tensions

Updated 04 March 2026
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Pakistan lets oil companies regulate supply to curb hoarding amid Gulf tensions

  • Oil marketing companies to regulate supplies to retail outlets based on historical sales patterns, says regulator
  • Pakistan holds “adequate stocks of petrol and diesel,” assures regulator amid ongoing Middle East conflict

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) announced on Wednesday it was allowing oil marketing companies to regulate supply to retail outlets as a temporary move to prevent hoarding, as tensions in the Middle East surge following the ongoing military conflict involving Iran. 

The decision follows fears of fuel shortage in Pakistan after the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic waterway between Iran and Oman, was shut after escalating hostilities between Tehran and the US and Israel in the Gulf. The conflict has disrupted tanker traffic through one of the world’s most important oil chokepoints.

Pakistan relies heavily on Middle Eastern crude oil, with the majority of its energy imports typically transiting the strait, making any disruption a major risk to domestic fuel supplies.

“To ensure the uninterrupted availability of petroleum products and to discourage hoarding during periods of extreme price volatility, Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) may temporarily regulate supplies to retail outlets based on their historical sales patterns,” OGRA spokesperson Imran Ghaznavi said in a press release.

“This measure is a standard supply management practice aimed at maintaining stability in the distribution system.”

The OGRA spokesperson clarified that Pakistan currently holds “adequate stocks of petrol and diesel, well within the required limits.”

He stressed that there is no shortage of petroleum products in the country.

“Citizens are advised not to pay attention to rumors and to rely only on information issued through official channels,” Ghaznavi said. 

Pakistan has moved quickly to ensure its stock of petroleum products does not take a massive hit. Pakistan’s Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik met Saudi Ambassador Nawaf bin Said Al-Malki on Wednesday. 

Pakistan asked Saudi Arabia for help in securing crude oil supplies through the Red Sea port of Yanbu, the petroleum ministry said.

The Saudi ambassador reaffirmed Riyadh’s support, saying the Kingdom was aware of the evolving situation and would stand with Pakistan to meet any emergency requirements, the statement added.