indian air purifier market

2016 INDIAN AIR PURIFIERS MARKET A comprehensive analysis of the Air Treatment (Air Purifiers) Market in India including market sizing, market share by competitor, drivers, restraints and market forecasts to 2022. For the purposes of this research, air treatment systems (also known as air purifiers) are portable systems and are defined as the following: Ultraviolet (UV) Air Purifiers Electrostatic Air Purifiers, Charged Media Filters HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) Filters Photo Catalytic Oxidation Air Purifiers Others (any other technology) The report captures the following information about the Air Purification Market in India: Market Size, Growth Rate, Revenue Forecast (2015 - 2022) Growth Drivers & Restraints Quotes from Industry Participants Sales by Key Areas Trends by End-User (Residential and Commercial Applications) Companies Featured: Eureka Forbes, Sharp Corporation, Blueair, Philips, and Panasonic Corporation, among others.

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how to fix mold in air ductsThe mega-city of New Delhi has tried everything from banning diesel guzzling SUVs to taking about half the city’s cars off the streets in a fight against air pollution.
best modern air purifierOfficials may yet have to do much, much more, based on National Aeronautics and Space Administration satellite research.
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The research depicts how much sunlight is blocked by airborne particles, providing a proxy for levels of pollution. The data show parts of the Indo-Gangetic plain -- stretching across northern India from eastern Pakistan on one side to Bangladesh on the other -- suffer some of the planet’s worst haze in October through January after monsoon rains end in September.On average during those months, as much as 10 times more solar beam was blocked over the plain from 2008 to 2014 compared with the U.S., signaling substantial concentrations in the air of the tiny, toxic PM2.5 particles that damage health. While New Delhi is heaving with millions of vehicles, exhaust-pipe emissions in cities in the densely populated plain are just part of a complex picture, according to Pawan Gupta, a research scientist at Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research in Greenbelt, Maryland."During the post-monsoon season, the Indo-Gangetic plain is one of the most heavily polluted regions," Gupta said. The burning of vegetation, for instance by farmers or for cooking, as well as a winter climate and a topography that traps pollutants, all add to the problem, he said.

Click here to see how a Wharton grad senses a fortune in India’s toxic air.A ribbon of 17 cities across or near the plain -- with a combined population of about 55 million -- dominates the World Health Organization’s ranking of the 30 metropolises with the worst air. The chain starts with Peshawar in Pakistan and heads south and east in a shallow arc through New Delhi and onto Narayanganj in Bangladesh.Hemmed in by the Himalayas, the region has what Gupta calls a valley-like topography that helps trap pollutants when temperatures cool.The NASA data on so-called aerosol optical depth also show heavy pollution in pre-monsoon summer months across the plain, in some parts as much as eight times more than average readings in the U.S.That’s partly because of dust billowing from the Thar Desert in northwestern India, according to G.P. Sharma, vice president of meteorology at Skymet Weather Services Pvt. in New Delhi.The World Bank in 2013 estimated the annual cost of environmental degradation in India at $80 billion.

That’s an indication of the overall blow for Asia’s No. 3 economy from pollution, even as companies such as Amsterdam-based Koninklijke Philips NV and Japan’s Sharp Corp. see growing sales of products such as air purifiers.There’s strong evidence that poor air leads to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, stoking costs such as hospital visits or sick days from work, and even deterring tourism, said Prakash Doraiswamy, an environmental scientist at North Carolina-based RTI International.New Delhi has tried banning cars with big diesel engines and experimented with periodic curbs on when vehicles can be used based on their number plates. India and Pakistan are also pursuing ambitious renewable-energy agendas to cut reliance on dirty fossil fuels. The scope of Indo-Gangetic haze signals such steps must intensify.When WHO data for PM2.5 is plotted, the concentrations are pretty similar across most regions, including those outside India, according to RTI’s Doraiswamy. That suggests this is a regional problem and requires a coordinated strategy, he said.

"Much more needs to be done by government, business and society to achieve clean air," said New Delhi-based Bhaskar Deol, founder of Mynergy Renewables Pvt. "While northern India’s unique topography is a challenge, international experience shows that comprehensive programs tackling a wide range of pollutants can successfully solve the problem without sacrificing economic growth." Pollution boosts online sales of air purifiersDigbijay MishraHighlights• Rising concerns about pollution in major Indian cities have led to a dramatic increase in sales of home air purifiers • Flipkart has witnessed a 400% month-on-month surge in sales; Snapdeal has seen a five-times growth • Delhi is the biggest buyer of air purifiers; Bengaluru is a distant second, followed by Mumbai.Highlights• Rising concerns about pollution in major Indian cities have led to a dramatic increase in sales of home air purifiersBengaluru is a distant second, followed by Mumbai.BENGALURU: Rising concerns about pollution in major Indian cities have led to a dramatic increase in sales of home air purifiers.

New Delhi, which has been called the most polluted city in the world by WHO, is not only the biggest buyer of air purifiers but is also the city that is seeing the fastest growth in sales of these devices. Bengaluru is a distant second, followed by Mumbai. E-commerce major Flipkart has witnessed a 400% month-on-month surge in sales over the last five months (July-November). Snapdeal has seen a five-times growth in sales of air purifiers this year compared to the same period last year, with the Delhi-NCR region leading the volumes with an 8X growth. Flipkart said search volumes for air purifiers grew by around eight times between November 8 and 13 -- around Diwali day -- as compared to previous weeks. An air purifier is a device that removes contaminants from the air in a room. Indoor air is said to be 10 to 30 times more polluted than outdoor air, and pollutants can include dust mites, bacteria, fungi, viruses, pollen and even pet hair and second-hand tobacco smoke. The devices are marketed as being particularly beneficial for those with allergies, asthma and other respiratory conditions.

A variety of brands -- including Philips, Livpure, Hosair and Eureka Forbes -- sell these devices at prices ranging from Rs 1,500 to Rs 20,000, depending on which contaminants they eliminate, how effectively and over what area. Delhi-NCR accounts for 40% of air purifier sales on Flipkart. Bengaluru (10%) and Mumbai (8%) follow. Cities like Patna, Ahmedabad, Lucknow, Kanpur and Ludhiana have also seen significant increase in volumes. Delhi-NCR's overwhelming lead is no surprise as the region has been marked as the most polluted city in the country by several reputed bodies. A WHO report last year ranked it the most polluted city in the world. The article 'Holding your breath in India' by New York Times' New Delhi correspondent Gardiner Harris, which he wrote in May, also had a profound impact on the pollution discourse in the national capital. Harris described in graphic detail the impact Delhi's pollution had on his family, and said he was leaving the city for that reason. The WHO report also found that 13 of the 20 most polluted cities in the world were in India.