According to a recent report issued by the Ministry of Environmental Protection, a quarter of Chinese cities exceeded the limits on noise pollution last year. Beijing News commented on Monday:
Chinese residents are no stranger to noise pollution, ranging from late-night construction to daytime traffic. They suffer from a variety of noises on a daily basis, but their complaints are often ignored or not dealt with properly.
Noise pollution, in effect, can be as harmfull as air, water and soil pollution, as it is a major cause of insomnia, even heart attacks.
There have been successful attempts to curb noise pollution in some countries. In Japan, construction sites are always surrounded with heavy shields to prevent noise and dust from spreading out. Germany has specific limits on road decibels and has applied noise reducing technology to its roads.
In comparison, China’s solutions to the noise problems, be they technological or legislative, still lag far behind. Neither the environmental protection authorities, who are supposed to take care of industrial noise, nor the police that should play a role in curbing traffic noise do their job properly. And public complaints about urban noise pollution often fall on deaf ears.
Building roadside shields should be a viable solution to traffic noise pollution. But they are poorly built even absent in many cities due to the lack of cooperation among departments. The noise pollution policies need to have more teeth to effectively tackle the problem.
KOLHAPUR: The dilapidated buildings along the Ganesh idol immersion routes are turning out to be the biggest concern for the civic authorities. On the one hand, the Kolhapur Municipal Corporation (KMC) has issued notices to the tenants of 45 such buildings to vacate the structures fearing high-decibel sound can damage those and lead to accidents. On the other hand, it wants the mandals to keep the sound level low along the stretches dotted with the dilapidated buildings to avert any accident because of the high-decibel beats. The KMC had identified these dilapidated buildings during a survey held a couple of years ago. The civic authorities have now now written to the police administration to ensure that the tenants in the buildings are not present inside at the procession time. If possible, the KMC wants these people to be relocated somewhere else till the procession ends. The KMC has termed these building dangerous to live in after a structural audit and even disconnected water and electricity supply to ensure the tenants leave. But over the last one month, the KMC has stopped the drive to remove residents of the dangerous buildings. The civic authorities claimed that most tenants in these buildings were in legal disputes with the respective owner. “The KMC cannot demolish these buildings in the absence of any legal provisions in such a situation,” a KMC official said. Records available with the divisional ward offices reveal that over 40 such buildings should be demolished at the earliest. There are over 90 dilapidated buildings in the city. KMC divisional engineer S K Mane said, “Through the notice, we have asked the tenants not to stay in the buildings until the processions end. No one should stand on the balconies as they may collapse due to the high-decibel sound. We had asked the tenants and owners to remove the buildings on their own last year. The KMC will not be responsible for any casualty if such a building collapses. Police have been asked to vacate these buildings during the immersion procession.” Sources said the civic authorities have sought permission from the district administration to demolish the buildings. But the district authorities require more time to study the legal disputes before ordering demolition. Most Ganesh mandal processions pass through Deval Club, Mirajkar Tickti, Mahadwar Road, Papachi Tickti and Gangavesh.
sound inspection holy houses
Almost all the dangerous buildings are located along the immersion routes of the major mandals, that use high-decibel sound system to attract revellers, particularly the youth. The immersion procession lasts for more than 24 hours. Pandals of many political parties are also set up along the immersion routes and such sound systems are used for announcements. “We have installed CCTV cameras along the immersion routes to keep a watch and avert any untoward incident. In case of the dilapidated buildings, we have asked police to ensure that enough space is left between the procession and the building so that rescue operations can be carried out effectively if there’s an emergency. The list of the dangerous buildings along the immersion route will be circulated to the mandals, so that they can reduce the sound volume. Police are entitled to frame charges against mandals if any such building collapses because of the high-decibel sound,” Mane said. The noise levels should not exceed 50 decibels (dB) in the hospital areas, while the cap is 55db in the residential areas (see graphics). Last year, police had booked 62 mandals for flouting the noise norms. The civic authorities said the dilapidated buildings may not sustain any sound above 80 dB. Mahendra Shelke, a resident of Malkar Tickti, said, “This year, police have categorically asked the mandals not to use Dolby system during the immersion processions. Even if any accident occurs, the mandals are not held responsible because of their influence. The procession routes should be changed as most of those pass through the congested and old city areas dotted with old buildings.”
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August Schiess, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 09/01/2016 Urban noise is sometimes seen as merely a harmless annoyance for people who live near busy streets or train stations, but it can cause health problems such as sleep disturbance, hearing loss, hypertension, and heart-related diseases.
Arrays are mounted to the top of an electric vehicle to measure noise levels. Arrays are mounted to the top of an electric vehicle to measure noise levels. Researchers have therefore been seeking ways to understand and combat the rising levels of urban noise. A team at the Advanced Digital Sciences Center (ADSC) has developed a signal processing technique that measures urban noise through portable microphones secured to the top of a moving vehicle, enabling the creation of a wide-ranging map of noise pollution.
“With a comprehensive understanding of the levels and types of noise pollution in urban areas, we can then analyze this information to create well-designed soundscapes that can alleviate the bad effects of environmental noise on physical and mental human health,” said Cagdas Tuna, a postdoctoral researcher at ADSC, a University of Illinois research center in Singapore.
Current noise-monitoring techniques are built into microphones fixed to the ground—they only measure sound from that vantage point, making a city-wide noise map an incredibly expensive idea. However, with the team’s portable solution, sound can be measured in as many locations as possible in the neighborhoods travelled by the vehicle.
To gather acoustic signals, they mount a microphone arrangement on an electric vehicle—the quiet engine keeps it from interfering with other external sounds. While driving along, the sensors identify a variety of noises and can pinpoint the location of sounds in relation to the vehicle.
Advanced signal processing tools recover and generate the noise-sources into an acoustic map at multiple frequencies.
“We have developed several different acoustic imaging algorithms, based on the multiple-location measurement scheme, to generate 2D acoustic maps,” said Tuna, a University of Illinois alumnus in electrical and computer engineering. “The maps show the noise-levels and locations of dominant noises.”
The team has been testing the new technique on Singapore streets over the past year. Tuna, who presented this work at the 23rd International Congress on Sound & Vibration (ICSV23) in July 2016, will continue to develop this technique by collecting more measurements around noisy areas such as construction sites.
This acoustics team at ADSC working on the project includes CSL and ECE Professor and ADSC Director Doug Jones, Tuna, Shengkui Zhao, ADSC research scientist, and Thi Ngoc Tho Nguyen, ADSC Senior Software Engineer.
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In the first part of our campaign, we look at honking, the bane of eardrums across city
The incessant blare of horns is a background score that almost every Bengalurean has come to live with. But what if we were to tell you that 93.7 per cent of people who use their horns do so for no reason whatsoever: that’s what a recent study discovered. In fact, the study claims that Bengaluru is India’s second noisiest city when it comes to honking.
“From the results of the three-day survey conducted as part of a ‘Culture of the City’ study, looks like people of Bengaluru imagine there is a Right to Honk,” says Harish Bijoor, who heads the consulting firm that performed the study for a multinational company. “Bengaluru, today, stands as the second noisiest city in India,” he says, adding that he could not divulge details as to which city topped the list due to the nature of the study.
If you go by that, things have got worse because a few months ago, the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) labelled Bengaluru India’s sixth noisiest city.
The high decibel level in Bengaluru is mostly an offshoot of frustration. The study finds: “Forty-two per cent of people honk because the traffic is moving slowly. Another 41 per cent says they honk because others drive badly, “says Bijoor. He adds that the survey’s responses showed that people often used honking like a swear word.
The responses included: “If I don’t honk, somebody else will”, “It is my way of telling them they are wrong”, “It is a way of me using bad language”, etc. “Honks categorised as necessary are those that can avoid an accident or save a life,” says Bijoor elaborating on the categorizations. Those are cases where people honk to caution somebody of their vehicle’s presence when it’s absolutely necessary, or when they honk to attract the attention of an animal crossing the road, which cannot be alerted otherwise.
Another interesting side the study focused on the honking habits of cab drivers – both those who work for cab aggregators and individual drivers. The results showed that drivers who work cab aggregators always tend to honk more than others.
The study also found that women drivers honk less than their male counterparts. “If we take the rate of honking on a scale of 10, then women would be 2, whereas men would be around 8.6,” says Bijoor.
The qualitative study was conducted by deploying 80 people at 80 different junctions in the city .They were deputed for collecting both direct responses from drivers and making observational recordings. Conducted on a sample of 48,000 people, the study has come up with a representative map of the honking intensity at these junctions.
“As this survey was conducted for a global organization, we cannot reveal the exact findings as to which part of the city is the noisiest,” says Bijoor. The response to the study shows that a majority of Bengalureans see honking as a part of life. They are not particularly annoyed by it and neither do they think of proactive measures to bring down the decibel levels.
The study focusing on the noise levels in cities is also an attempt to look at the decibel levels in third world countries. “Usually, the noise levels in third world countries tend to be higher,” says Bijoor.
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The sound and vibration analyser Nor150 sets new standards in user-friendliness. Featuring the largest colour touchscreen in a handheld meter on the market today, the Nor150 provides the user friendliness of a smartphone. Further features include, built in web server, camera, GPS and advanced voice and text notes bringing the sophistications normally found in laboratory instrumentation out in the field.
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Summary: Tuning the engine and changing the brake system is another method.According to mechanics, noisy silencers are imported from Bangkok, Taiwan and China and priced anywhere between Rs 8,000 and 35,000. “After the cops are gone, they return on the streets, which they use as a racing track. “In India, copies of original imported silencers are created to meet increasing demand from youngsters. While silencers from Punjab are said to be the noisiest and mostly meant for Bullet bikes, those from Jaipur and Bangalore emit a typical racing bike-like sound. Apart from these silencers, there are also boosters that are forcibily fitted on to a bike’s silencer to create bike racing-like sounds,” said Akleem Ansari alias ‘Chhoto Mechanic’ from Agripada.
While bikes with modified exhaust pipes that can wake up the dead with their ear-defeaning firing sound are on the rise, the number of bikers who are being booked for riding them has been on the decline over the past few years. This year till date, merely 18 bikers have been booked for the offence and fined Rs 6,000 compared with 56 cases and Rs 20,500 collected in fine in 2015—again a dip from 77 persons booked and Rs 28,000 penalty collected in 2014.These bikes are a major source of noise pollution in the city. TOI has been running a campaign against noise pollution in association with Awaaz Foundation Few in the city are aware that any alteration to a factory model is illegal under the Motor Vehicles Act , 1988.
Any alteration that results in an up to 10% increase in the weight of a vehicle must be done with the manufacturer as well as the regional transport office’s consent.While changes to exhaust pipes are not allowed, removing the catalytic converter, a component fitted to the exhaust pipe, is the easiest way to boost a bike’s vroom. Tuning the engine and changing the brake system is another method.According to mechanics, noisy silencers are imported from Bangkok, Taiwan and China and priced anywhere between Rs 8,000 and 35,000. These can be fitted onto cars too.
Mumbai: In a city with over 50 flyovers, most of which run past residential areas, barely half a dozen have been fitted with the mandated barriers which can bring noise levels down. This, despite repeated complaints by residents in various areas and an amendment to Development Control rules (DCR), which makes it compulsory to install them. The barriers have to be installed by the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA) and the Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation (MSRDC), which built most of the flyovers. Both cite shortage of funds as the main reason for the violation. Considering that barriers would cost roughly Rs 6-7 crore per flyover—a fraction of the cost of building a flyover—the explanation does seem odd. In Mumbai, noise barriers for flyovers first became a reality after BMC and MMRDA officials travelled to Italy in 2011 to study the concept of noise reduction. Apart from flyovers, a 1,500-metre noise barrier was also erected by MMRDA along the Indian Institute of Technology campus perimeter in 2012 and on the Kalanagar stretch at Bandra-Kurla Complex. These were panels of pre-galvanized sheets, painted in keeping with the aesthetics of the surroundings and mounted on the flyovers. If placed correctly, they lower noise by up to 17 decibels, according to studies done by Awaaz Foundation (TOI’s campaign against noise is in association with this NGO). Some more have been erected on Sion Hospital, King’s Circle, Hindmata and Dahisar flyovers. On the 16.8km Eastern Freeway, which connects P D’Mello Road in south Mumbai with Eastern Express Highway at Ghatkopar, too, there are stretches where barriers are visible. A few of them are of inferior material though, and serve only to block the view into nearby areas while others may be in inappropriate locations. Anti-noise activist Sumaira Abdulali said there is an urgent need for scientific studies to be done before erecting barriers. “For example, noise barriers have been erected on the Sion flyover. Instead, these should have been erected near the Sion Circle junction where there is continuous movement of vehicles. There is a need for a noise-mapping study or else the infrastructure may not prove to be useful at all. Noise barriers are more helpful when erected at heavy traffic junctions. In case of BKC, barriers were put at the request of the residents and they are happy with it. This is what the authorities should look at doing instead of randomly placing them on any flyover,” said Abdulali. MMRDA officials said there are plans to install them on two more flyovers on the Eastern Expressway, but there are no deadlines as of now and there is no clarity on whether studies are being undertaken. In case of MSRDC, of the 23 flyovers it built in the Mumbai metropolitan region, only one in Thane at Kapurbawadi has noise barriers at present—residents and commercial establishments along the remaining 22 have to cope with the sound pollution that easily goes beyond the permissible 45-65 decibels range. The agency, which has a budget of a few hundred crores, though, says it is now in the process of finalizing a proposal to build barriers on JJ flyover more than 15 years after its completion. “People living along JJ flyover have demanded such barriers but it all depends on the state and financially sound agencies like MMRDA who can make funds available for the purpose,” a senior MSRDC engineer told TOI .
Mumbai flyoverws noise nuisance
MSRDC, which built the Bandra-Worli sea link, cites poor finances as the reason for lack of initiative on its part. The agency has scores of important flyovers to maintain such as the ones at Sion, J J, Vakola, JVLR, Duttapada, Aaarey Colony, Kandivli, Borivli National Park, Nitin Cadbury, Teen Hath Naka and Golden Dyes. It has contracted work of maintenance of these flyovers and certain subways to Mumbai Entry Point Toll, which collects toll against their maintenance at five toll posts—Vashi, Airoli, Mulund, LBS and Dahisar—on the city’s fringes. According to MSRDC officials, only flyovers within a 30-metre distance from residential buildings need barriers; those who live beyond may not get disturbed. They said barriers on flyovers only cut the sound emanating from vehicles taking the flyovers. Noise from those zooming below the viaducts remains unchecked. To make residential areas fully sound-proof, such barriers are needed along building boundaries as well. Mumbai has two road stretches—one at BKC along Matoshree in Kalanagar and the other at IIT, Powai campus on JVLR—which have barriers erected by MMRDA along the road to obstruct noise of vehicles entering these areas. Sion resident G R Vora from the F-North Ward Citizens’ Federation said authorities need to analyze and do research before erecting noise barriers. “In case residential buildings are near flyovers, these barriers has helped but in case of barriers which have been erected on the Sion hospital flyover the buildings and the hospital are located at a distance and therefore it is not proving to be very useful,” said Vora.