People in Bangkok urged to work from home amid high pollution levels

People in Bangkok urged to work from home amid high pollution levels
The Air Quality Index on Thursday shows numerous red spots in Thailand. (Screen capture from IQAir)

Authorities warned that pollution levels in Bangkok and surrounding provinces had hit unhealthy levels on Thursday, ordering government employees in the capital to work from home for the next two days and urging others to do the same.

Air pollution is caused by a combination of crop-related burning, industrial pollution and heavy traffic, and a smoky haze covered the Bangkok’s skyline.

Swiss air quality tracking website IQAir said the level of fine inhalable particles in the city was 15 times higher than the recommended level by the World Health Organization (WHO), making it the world’s 8th most polluted city on Thursday.

In Bangkok, IQAir reported dust levels of 66.1 microgrammes per cubic metre (µg/m³) of air on Thursday. The government’s safe threshold for PM2.5 is 37.5 µg/m³, while the World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines recommend 25 µg/m³.

“It’s getting worse because there’s too much smoke haze,” said motorcycle taxi driver Kornpong Poprakun, 57. “I feel itchy eyes because there’s a lot of dust, and breathing isn’t easy.”

On Wednesday, the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) called on state agencies and private organisations to allow their staff to work from home Thursday and Friday.

In a bid to curb traffic pollution, Bangkok Governor Chadchart Sittipunt told staff at the Metropolitan Administration’s agencies to work from home and said other employees should also do the same.

He said some areas of the city had high levels of pollution and authorities were ready to manage the situation.

The government has offered subsidies to farmers to prevent burning and packages for cheaper electric vehicles while lawmakers are considering a clean air act for transport, business and agriculture to reduce pollution on a wider scale.