Jammu & Kashmir is failing every clean-air test and the numbers are not just statistics; they are warnings carved into the lungs of its people. Recently, Clean Air Survey 2025 placed Srinagar at 21st and Jammu at 22nd among Indian cities, both falling short of even basic standards. The place, once celebrated for its crisp mountain air, now finds itself in the same league as India’s most polluted zones. The irony is cruel: the Valley that once offered refuge from smog now suffocates under its own.
The health consequences are staggering. Medical reports show that children exposed to high levels of particulate matter suffer reduced lung capacity, asthma and weakened immunity. Hospitals in Srinagar and Jammu are recording rising cases of bronchitis among school-going children. For the elderly, the risks are even more severe, cardiovascular disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and strokes are linked directly to prolonged exposure. Pregnant women face heightened risks of low birth weight and developmental disorders. The invisible haze is not just an irritant; it is a silent epidemic.
Data from the Central Pollution Control Board confirms that air quality in Jammu & Kashmir frequently falls into the “poor” category, with AQI levels between 201 and 300 causing breathing discomfort for most people. When levels rise to “very poor” (301–400), respiratory illness becomes widespread, and “sever” (401–500) conditions affect even healthy individuals. In winter, temperature inversions trap pollutants close to the ground, worsening the crisis. This means the coming months could see spikes in respiratory distress, hospital admissions and avoidable deaths.
Agencies tasked with protecting public health and the environment cannot escape accountability. Ministry of Environment has identified construction dust and garbage burning as primary culprits, yet enforcement remains weak. Municipal bodies have failed to regulate construction sites, where dust rises unchecked and waste continues to be burned in open plots. Vehicular emissions add to the toxic mix, with traffic congestion worsening air quality in both Srinagar and Jammu. The gap between policy and practice is widening and citizens are paying the price.
The do’s and don’ts are clear. Dust must be controlled at construction sites, vehicular emissions must be regulated and waste must be managed without fire. Green cover must be expanded, and public transport strengthened. What must not be allowed is bureaucratic inertia, unchecked urban sprawl and the casual burning of garbage that turns neighbourhoods into toxic chambers. These are not optional measures; they are survival imperatives.
Overcoming these challenges requires systemic reform and citizen participation. Other cities have shown that determined action can make a difference. Delhi’s odd-even traffic rules, Chandigarh’s waste segregation drives and Bengaluru’s green cover expansion are imperfect but instructive. Jammu & Kashmir must adapt these lessons to its unique geography and social fabric. Leadership must treat clean air not as a luxury but as a fundamental right. Citizens, too, must change habits; reduce private vehicle use, stop waste burning and support community-driven green initiatives.
This is not just about air; it is about dignity, health and survival. Children are being robbed of their future breath, the elderly of their final peace and the Valley of its famed beauty. Silence is complicity, delay is death. If agencies continue to stall and citizens remain passive, Jammu & Kashmir will lose not just its reputation but its very ability to sustain life. The challenge is immense, but the choice is stark: reclaim the air, or surrender the future.
