NASA Research Reveals Shift in Stubble Burning Timing Worsens North India's Air Pollution Crisis

NASA scientists have identified a significant shift in stubble burning patterns across northern India, with farmers now setting fires later in the evening rather than afternoon. This timing change complicates pollution monitoring efforts and may worsen air quality as evening conditions allow pollutants to accumulate more efficiently overnight. Satellite data shows this pattern shifting from 1-2 PM to 4-6 PM burning times, contributing to hazardous air quality levels across the Indo-Gangetic Plain during post-harvest seasons.

NASA Says Shift In Stubble Burning Time Impacting Air Quality In North India

Washington:

NASA reports that seasonal crop fires across northern India are increasingly occurring later in the day, a shift that scientists believe may complicate efforts to monitor stubble burning and evaluate its impact on air quality, according to satellite observations and recent research studies.

For decades, extensive smoke and haze have spread across the Indo-Gangetic Plain from October to December as farmers burn crop residue following the rice harvest. While the overall pattern of the 2025 stubble-burning season followed expected trends, the daily timing of fires showed a significant departure from historical patterns, according to a NASA release on Monday.

Hiren Jethva, a Morgan State University atmospheric scientist based at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, noted that in some respects, the seasonal timing of stubble fires in 2025 followed typical patterns. Air quality deteriorated in Delhi and several other cities for approximately one month after crop fires intensified during the last week of October.

Jethva has tracked stubble burning in India using satellite data for about a decade and has forecasted the intensity of upcoming fire seasons based on vegetation observations. In previous years, most fires were typically set in the early afternoon, between 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. local time.

However, this pattern has undergone a change. "In the past few years, stubble fires have occurred progressively later in the day," Jethva explained. His analysis reveals that most stubble fires now take place between 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. "Farmers have changed their behavior," he observed.

Jethva identified this shift by analyzing data from GEO-KOMPSAT-2A, a South Korean geostationary satellite launched in late 2018 that collects observations every 10 minutes. In contrast, fire-monitoring systems that primarily rely on sensors such as MODIS or VIIRS, which only pass over locations once or twice daily, can miss many of these later-burning fires.

Scientists noted that satellite imagery illustrates the scale of the problem. On November 11, 2025, the MODIS instrument on NASA's Aqua satellite captured a thick plume of smoke and haze spreading across Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, and Madhya Pradesh.

According to news reports, it was the first of several days in 2025 when pollution levels exceeded 400 on India's air quality index, the highest rating on the scale.

As in previous years, the spike in pollution prompted authorities in some areas to close schools and implement stricter controls on construction activity. When winds are weak and atmospheric conditions are stagnant, the resulting haze can push pollution levels several times above World Health Organization limits.

Jethva's analysis indicates that stubble-burning activity in Punjab and Haryana in 2025 was moderate compared to other recent years. He found that fire counts were higher than in 2024, 2020, and 2019, but lower than in 2023, 2022, and 2021.

Indian researchers have independently identified a similar shift in timing. In a Current Science study published in 2025, scientists reported that Meteosat Second Generation satellite observations showed peak fire activity moving from about 1:30 p.m. in 2020 to about 5:00 p.m. in 2024. In December 2025, researchers at the International Forum for Environment, Sustainability, & Technology released a multi-satellite analysis that reached a similar conclusion.

While the connection between stubble burning and Delhi's air pollution is widely acknowledged, scientists continue to debate the exact contribution of crop fires relative to other sources such as vehicles, industry, domestic cooking and heating, fireworks, and dust storms. "Studies report contributions ranging from 10 to 50 per cent," said Pawan Gupta, a NASA research scientist specializing in air quality.

Gupta estimates that stubble burning accounts for 40 to 70 per cent of pollution on a given day during peak episodes, dropping to 20 to 30 per cent when averaged over a month, and to under 10 per cent when averaged annually. "Meteorological conditions—like a shallow boundary layer height and low temperature—during the burning season add extra complexity," he said.

Scientists say the later timing of fires could influence how pollution builds up overnight, as evening burns may coincide with weaker winds and a shallower boundary layer, allowing pollutants to accumulate more efficiently.

Source: https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/nasa-says-shift-in-stubble-burning-time-impacting-air-quality-in-north-india-9824840