Diwali night celebrations have ended, but the glory of the Diwali night celebrations can still be seen from these satellite images that can leave you in awe. If you are an environmentalist and care about pollution-related disasters, these images will help you assess the level of damage done across the major cities of India. If you are someone who just loves to live in the moment and had a wonderful Diwali night celebration with firecrackers, these images will be the best thing you see allowing you to spot the cities with the most celebrations on Diwali night.
Delhi is known to be one of the most polluted cities in India, but that didn’t stop the people of Delhi and NCR from celebrating this year’s Diwali on a magnanimous scale. As evident from the pictures taken by an ISRO Satellite, Delhi and NCR stands apart from the rest of the Indian cities when it comes to celebrating with firecrackers on Diwali night.
West Bengal’s Kolkata is the brightest among the cities in Eastern India on the night of Diwali. Some other cities like Odisha’s Bhubaneswar have topped the celebrations as observed from these satellite Images.
When it comes to South Indian cities, Telangana’s Hyderabad and Tamilnadu’s Chennai have dazzled the night skies with unhindered celebrations for this year’s Diwali. Other South Indian cities like Karnataka’s Bengaluru and Andhra Pradesh’s Amaravati/Vijayawada were just as brilliant.
What is so interesting about this year’s Diwali celebration is that firecrackers prices have gone up, in some cities the prices surged by as much as 50% compared to last year. These inflated prices have no bearing on the people who wants to celebrate Diwali with full hearts. The overall prices of firecrackers sold in terms of volume and prices have gone up and the skies lit up even more bright and jubilant.
Leaving the question of whether Green Crackers work or not and whether the chemistry behind Green Crackers is actually good for the environment, these Green Crackers are nowhere to be found except in some privileged locations where the folk could afford their even higher prices than the ordinary firecrackers.