NewDelhi: The AAP government will on Monday move the National Green Tribunal (NGT) asking to exempt two-wheelers and cars driven by women from the plan while implementing the odd-even traffic rationing system in the national capital, even as the pollution in the city worsened on Sunday. Arvind Kejriwal The air quality in Delhi had deteriorated on Sunday after a sharp rise in presence of pollutants. Both PM 2.5 and PM 10 levels, measured at 480 and 712 micrograms per cubic meter, respectively, were back at the “emergency” threshold of the Graded Response Action Plan. The figure in other NCR cities, too, was alarmingly high on Sunday – 468 in Faridabad, 498 in Ghaziabad, 460 in Gurgaon and 492 in Noida. Experts had earlier forecast a drop in levels from Sunday onwards, but pollution levels rose once again from Saturday evening due fall in temperatures and a drop in the ‘boundary layer’, which traps pollutants and separates the surface atmosphere with the outer atmosphere. The NGT on Saturday had given a go-ahead to the Odd-Even scheme to be implemented from November 13 but reprimanded the Delhi government for acting late on rising pollution levels. However, not pleased with the NGT order, the Delhi government has decided to file a review petition in the tribunal today, asking the green court to take a re-look at exemptions for both women and two-wheelers.