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Delhi govt will have to act on pollution: Prakash Javadekar

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Maret 2015 | 22.33

NEW DELHI: In the wake of alarming air quality and mounting piles of garbage in Delhi, environment minister Prakash Javadekar on Tuesday said the state government will have to work in this regard and assured his ministry's complete support.

He also announced that national air quality index will be launched in ten cities including Delhi to enhance public awareness and involvement in air quality improvement.

On the pollution in the national capital, the Minister said he had held three meetings with the state government to discuss the issue.

"We held three meetings with Delhi government and held detailed discussions on issues like sewerage management, solid waste, pollution control, monitoring of dust particles. They assured us to submit an action plan till 31 March," he said, adding that the ministry has not received any plans so far and would wait for it.

"It is the responsibility of Delhi government to come up with the action plan as soon as possible. It will have to work as people can see garbage all around the city and sewerage is also not being treated properly," he said at a press conference here.

Elaborating about the Air Quality index, Javadekar said, "The index will inform public about air quality in simple understandable form. On real-time basis, it would be available for ten cities," he said, adding that 20 state capitals and 46 cities with million-plus population will be covered in the next couple of years.

Stressing on the need to change mindset, Javadekar said pollution has to be fought with on daily basis.

"It is not that CNG is done, the job is done. It is a continuous process. We have to improve upon everyday in areas like compliance mechanism, emission control, etc," he said.

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Ex-techie educates kids about tigers and conservation

MANGALURU: A former techie from Chennai who is now a homemaker here is all set to create awareness among children about tigers and conservation.

Maithily Arulraja, now a part-time content writer, plans to screen 'Truth about Tigers' which triggered her interest in big cats and conduct quizzes and interactive sessions with kids. She plans to conduct competitions to ignite their interest in the big cats. 'Truth about Tigers', a documentary by award-winning wildlife and conservation filmmaker Shekar Dattatri, provides pointers on how ordinary citizens can help save the tiger.

The documentary combines stunning footage shot by leading cinematographers with insights from experts like renowned tiger biologist Ullas Karanth of the Wildlife Conservation Society, and wildlife crime fighter Belinda Wright of the Wildlife Protection Society of India. The film takes you through a tiger's life, from birth to death, and illustrates how different human activities impact conservation efforts. Internationally acclaimed actor Roshan Seth has lent his voice for the narration, and one of Britain's top documentary composers David Mitcham has done the score.

Maithily said: "Since I was in school, I had a passion for tigers. I love their majestic look and my interest led me to collect pictures and posters about tigers. In 2010, I heard about 'Truth about Tigers' and got a DVD from Shekar Dattatri. I was so inspired by it that I planned to spread awareness about tigers among the general public. I contacted Shekar and asked him for suggestions and he assisted me on how to screen the film in schools and clubs."

In Chennai, Maithily contacted a few schools and screened the movie and conducted discussion and quizzes. "I got calls from various clubs in Chennai who heard about my work and the movie there too," she said.

After moving to Mangaluru recently, she plans similar same activities here for young children during their summer vacations. She plans to contact schools in June to screen the movie there. "The documentary says 'Passion without action is of no use' and that made me take that extra step to create awareness,'' she said.

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Sunderbans sea level to rise 3-8 mm per year: World Bank report

Written By Unknown on Senin, 30 Maret 2015 | 22.33

BALI ISLAND (Sunderbans): The water level in the Sunderbans, the world's largest mangrove forest, is rising at an "alarming" level, endangering the habitation, a World Bank report has suggested.

The report stated that the sea level could witness an estimated 3 to 8 mm rise per year and mainly attributed it to land subsidence caused by various natural and anthropogenic processes.

The report, titled "Building Resilience for Sustainable Development of the Sunderbans - Strategy Report" said, "Parts of the coast in the south were rising because of uplift whichillustrates that impacts were not homogeneous and differ according to varying geological processes."

The World Bank report said that seismic events, such as the 2004 tsunami and the aftershocks, could also shift land levels by a meter more over a period of few days.

"But most change is gradual and a frequent response is simple inundation and loss of land. The Ghoramara Island (part of Sagar block in Sunderbans) will be completely submerged in the coming decades and the Island is largely uninhabitable. Two nearby islands are totally submerged at high tide," the report stated.

Senior consultant with the World Bank Sanjay Gupta told PTI that the situation in the Sunderbans was alarming and called for immediate and concrete steps to tackle it.

Gupta pointed out that the subsidence and inundation also led to routine flooding which contributes to salinization of the soil and fresh water resources.

The report pointed out that flooding from storm surges remained a significant hazard even when embankments were present, as natural disasters were capable of wiping out embankments.

"Given the relatively flat landscape, hazard mapping suggests that a 45 cm rise in the sea level would destroy 75 per cent of the Indian and Bangladeshi Sunderbans," it stated.

While talking about the impact of sea level rise on mangrove forests, the report stated that the changing estuary dynamics had reduced the transport mechanism for wild mangrove propagules (Seeds).

The report stated that management of estuaries could be the key to tackle the impact of sea level rise in the Sunderbans.

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Leopard trapped in Jalpaiguri, released in forest

JALPAIGURI (WB): A full grown female leopard at Binnaguri tea garden here was captured and released in a forest on Monday, forest department officials said.

Divisional forest officer (Jalpaiguri) Sunita Ghatak said the animal was caught last night in a trap laid in the tea garden under Dhupguri block.

The trap was laid there sometime back after three persons were injured in leopard attacks in a month, she said.

After the news spread that a leopard was caught in the trap this morning, a large number of people assembled near it and the animal got scared.

It started jumping inside the cage in fear and injured its head and mouth, according to locals.

Ghatak said the animal was later taken to Garumara National Park and released there.

Asked if the leopard was treated before releasing it, the DFO said it would be done if the personnel think it is required.

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US to submit plans to fight global warming; most others delay

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 Maret 2015 | 22.33

OSLO/WASHINGTON: The United States will submit plans for slowing global warming to the United Nations early this week but most governments will miss an informal March 31 deadline, complicating work on a global climate deal due in December.

The US submission, on Monday or Tuesday according to a White House official, adds to national strategies beyond 2020 already presented by the 28-nation European Union, Mexico, Switzerland and Norway.

Together, they account for about a third of world greenhouse emissions. But other emitters such as China, India, Russia, Brazil, Canada and Australia say they are waiting until closer to a Paris summit in December, meant to agree a global deal.

"It's not the ideal situation," said Niklas Hoehne, founding partner of the New Climate Institute in Germany which tracks submissions, known as Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs).

In 2013, the United Nations invited INDCs by March 31, 2015, from governments "ready to do so" - the early, informal deadline was meant to give time to compare pledges and toughen weak ones.

Late submissions complicate the Paris summit because it will be far harder to judge late INDCs.

"The earlier the better," said Jake Schmidt, of the US National Resources Defense Council. "It allows people to look at each others' targets and judge whether or not they pass muster."

The White House official noted that both the United States and China already outlined plans last year, saying: "That adds up to a fantastic running start."

The United States plans to cut emissions by 26 to 28 per cent below 2005 levels by 2025.

Mexico on Friday became the first emerging economy to make a pledge, saying its emissions would peak by 2026. Developing countries set less strict goals than developed states since they need to burn more energy to grow their economies.

Mexico's plan "certainly should create incentives for developed countries to come in," said Jennifer Morgan, of the World Resources Institute, noting rich nations are meant to lead.

The UN Climate Change Secretariat will compile by November 1 submissions made by October 1.

It says it is already clear that INDCs will fall short of emissions cuts needed to limit temperatures to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times, a UN ceiling to avert floods, desertification, and rising seas.

"We expect many more countries to submit INDCs over the coming days, weeks and months," said Nick Nuttall, spokesman for the secretariat.

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Taj Corridor now an animal graveyard, garbage dump

AGRA: The Taj Corridor, a vast wasteland situated along the Yamuna river and lying between two world heritage monuments, the Taj Mahal and the Agra Fort, has now been reduced to a dumping ground for garbage and an unofficial burial ground for animals.

Foreign tourists have taken numerous images of bloated camels, swollen and stinking donkeys, dead dogs and heaps of fish bones along a stretch that is now a visually ugly sight and mars the scenery between the two great monuments visited by millions round the year.

"The Taj Corridor is an example of how we hardly care for our heritage and the tourism," a bitter Surendra Sharma, president of the Braj Mandal Heritage Conservation Society, told IANS.

"Such an ugly sight near the world's most beautiful monument can be repulsive and nauseating," NRI Rajesh Kumar told IANS.

Despite the 2006 Supreme Court directive to the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) to green the wasteland, neither the Uttar Pradesh forest department nor the ASI has made any move to clear the debris and turn the area into a green lung. Once at the centre of a huge political furore, the ill-conceived Taj Corridor brought down the Mayawati government in 2003 on charges of corruption. The Supreme Court in the same year stayed construction on the site.

Agra Development Foundation President and eminent lawyer K.C. Jain told IANS: "In December 2005, the apex court constituted a committee of experts to give its recommendations. In February 2006, on the basis of this report, the Supreme Court directed the ASI to present a plan of action. Since then the matter has been hanging, despite promises by former tourism minister Ram Naik and present Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma."

"It is not our responsibility to clean up the area. We will ask the municipal authorities and send them a notice," the regional office of the UP Pollution Control Board said.

A district official told IANS: "The Taj Corridor is court property and we cannot interfere till the stay is lifted."

The Agra Development Authority officials said they had put up an iron gate to regulate the movement of undesirable elements. The gate, however, always remains open and there is no one there to look after the incomplete corridor which has become a dumping ground of municipal waste.

"The real fear is that dreaded diseases could break out as carcasses are lying scattered around, inviting mosquitoes and parasites," tourist guide Ved Gautam told IANS.

The Rs.175 crore ($3.5 million) project was to be built on a platform, raised from scooped-up silt of the river, and was to comprise an amusement park, malls and commercial shops, also walkways through the dense wilderness to let tourists take a leisurely stroll on moonlit nights, according to the National Projects Corp Ltd., which was assigned the task.

The corridor was to begin from Khan-e-Alam, close to the Taj Mahal, and end two kilometres towards the city behind Agra Fort. It was to be later extended to allow tourists to reach Etmaddaula and Ram Bagh across the river. For three months, hundreds of tractors, earthmovers and other machines worked round the clock to dig out silt and deposit it on the riverbank to create a new platform.

Conservationists raised a hue and cry, saying that the corridor would endanger the monument. Allegations of large-scale corruption surfaced, and the central government ordered the work to be suspended in 2003. The scandal involved the allotment of large tracts of state government land along the proposed corridor to a private builder for a song.

Some people in Agra still feel the project was a victim of politics. Some say the project could genuinely boost tourism as it was strategically located between the Taj Mahal and Agra Fort.

"The previous NDA (National Democratic Alliance) government used it as an excuse to settle scores with Mayawati in 2003," activist Shravan Kumar Singh told IANS.

"It might even help save the dying Yamuna river once people start coming to the lush green lawns of the corridor. A rethink with an open mind is called for," environmental activist Rajan Kishore told IANS.

"Now that a platform has already come up, it can be cleaned up and used for various social and cultural activities. Even a night bazaar could come up. Hotels can be roped in as well. The army unit stationed nearby and in the fort can be asked to supervise things. We need to innovate and improvise rather than keep complaining," Kishore added.

Be that as it may, the last word has yet to be said on the corridor.

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Extreme winter not a result of climate change: Study

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Maret 2015 | 22.33

WASHINGTON: Contrary to popular belief, cold snaps like the ones that hit the eastern United States in the past winter are not a consequence of climate change, says a new study.

The results, published in the Journal of Climate, showed that global warming actually tends to reduce temperature variability.

Repeated cold snaps led to temperatures far below freezing across the eastern United States in the past two winters. Parts of the Niagara Falls froze, and ice floes formed on Lake Michigan.

But scientists at ETH Zurich in Switzerland and the California Institute of Technology in the US led by Tapio Schneider, professor of climate dynamics at ETH Zurich, found that the extreme winters were not a result of climate change.

They used climate simulations and theoretical arguments to show that in most places, the range of temperature fluctuations will decrease as the climate warms.

So not only will cold snaps become rarer simply because the climate is warming. Additionally, their frequency will be reduced because fluctuations about the warming mean temperature also become smaller.

However, Schneider noted that "despite lower temperature variance, there will be more extreme warm periods in the future because the Earth is warming".

Using a highly simplified climate model, they examined various climate scenarios to verify their theory.

It showed that the temperature variability in mid-latitudes indeed decreases as the temperature difference between the poles and the equator diminishes.

Climate model simulations by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) showed similar results: as the climate warms, temperature differences in mid-latitudes decrease, and so does temperature variability, especially in winter.

Temperature extremes will therefore become rarer as this variability is reduced. But this does not mean there will be no temperature extremes in the future, the researchers added.

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Environmental laws being reviewed to give more teeth: Prakash Javadekar

HYDERABAD: The Centre is reviewing all environmental laws with an aim to give them more teeth and hand severe punishment in cases of encroachment and violation, Union environment minister Prakash Javadekar said on Saturday.

Speaking to PTI here, Javadekar said two Forest Acts, and one each in environment protection, air, water and bio-diversity govern the whole environmental regime.

"We are reviewing all these laws to make people participatory in it ... make them more meaningful and give more teeth. Instances of violations and encroachments will be severely punished," he said.

The minister said the government will come out with draft laws after completing the review work, he said.

Earlier, interacting with joggers at KBR Park here, Javadekar said India is currently faced with the problem of shrinking space and limited resources.

"We (India) are just 2.5 per cent of the world's land mass, and we are 17 per cent of the (global) human population and 70 per cent of cattle population. It's a huge pressure on land resources," he added.

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Four leopards die in Tripura zoo

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Maret 2015 | 22.33

AGARTALA: Four common leopards have died in Tripura's Sepahijala wildlife zoo and sanctuary since Monday due to Felina babesiosis, a tick-borne malaria-like illness, an official said here on Friday.

"All the four common leopards died in the zoo. We have held an emergency meeting with KK Sharma (an official at the College of Veterinary Science, Guwahati) and taken all precautionary measures to ensure the safety of other animals," said zoo director Krishna Gopal Roy.

"We have tested the blood samples of the dead leopards in two government-run laboratories in Agartala and confirmed that the animals died due to Felina babesiosis," Roy told IANS over phone.

The official, however, said that all the 13 endangered Clouded Leopard in the zoo were healthy and the wildlife experts and doctors were looking after them very carefully.

Wildlife experts felt that the infection from the first common leopard, which died on March 23 due to the infection, is believed to be transmitted through mosquito bites.

"We have taken all kinds of measures to control further spread of the disease at the zoo and follow the advice of experts and guidelines of the Indian Veterinary Research Institute," added Roy.

He also said that two common leopards, rescued from Kaziranga National Park in Assam by NGO Wildlife Trust of India will be brought here soon.

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Norway joins race of rich nations to submit their action plans for a global climate deal

NEW DELHI: Joining race of rich nations including Switzerland and European Union (EU) countries in submitting their respective 'climate action plans' well in time, Norway on Friday submitted its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) to the UNFCCC promising to cut at least 40% of its greenhouse gas emissions by the year 2030 compared to 1990 level.

Norway's INDC is at par with the EU's promise but less than that of Switzerland that promised to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by at least 50% by 2030 from its 1990 level. Switzerland was, in fact, the first country that had submitted its climate action plan to the UN body.

Norway, however, promised that the country will consider taking a commitment "beyond an emission reduction of 40% compared to 1990 levels" if it can contribute to a global and ambitious climate agreement in Paris..

Quoting country's climate and environment minister Tine Sundtoft, Norway's official statement said, "We need more international cooperation to meet the climate challenge. A collective delivery for Norway and the EU on climate change is a step in the right direction.

"Both Norway and the EU have high ambitions on climate, and view climate measures in the context of long term transition to low emission societies. By linking our climate efforts, we can achieve better results".

The country also noted that the solution with the EU means that the 40% emission reduction will be implemented in Europe, without the use of international market mechanisms outside of the EU and Norway.

"If it can contribute to a global and ambitious climate agreement in Paris, Norway will consider taking a commitment beyond an emission reduction of 40% compared to 1990 levels, through the use of flexible mechanisms under the UN framework convention, beyond a collective delivery with the EU", said the country's climate and environment minister, adding "It is important that the Paris climate agreement includes market based mechanisms. By using the market, countries can raise ambitions collectively".

The EU had in its INDCs, submitted early this month, pledged that this group of 28 countries would work to reduce domestic emission of greenhouse gases by 40% from their 1990 level by the year 2030.

Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, Ireland, Greece, Spain, France, Italy, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Hungary, Malta, Netherlands, Austria, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovenia, Slovakia, Finland, Sweden, United Kingdom are 28 member countries in the EU.

Besides, the EU had also committed for a regular review and strengthening of its mitigation commitments consistent with a long-term goal to curb emissions.

Under the INDCs, all countries are expected to submit their 'nationally determined contribution' in terms of their mitigation (emission cut) and adaptation goals well in advance ahead of the Paris climate talks, scheduled for December, where a new climate deal is expected to be signed.

India is also preparing its INDC. Though the country was initially expected to submit its plan in June, officials here do not willing to commit on any time-frame. Even the environment and climate change minister Prakash Javadekar did not prefer to commit on any timeline when he was asked by TOI a few days ago about India's plan. He had said that India was preparing its INDCs and it would submit it "well in time".

It is expected that all the countries will submit their 'climate action plans' before October 1 so that a final report can be prepared before the beginning of the Paris climate talks in December when the world would, hopefully, arrive at a new global climate deal.

The new climate agreement will come into effect in 2020 and will work for keeping a global temperature rise this century under 2 degrees C.

Submitting its INDC to the UNFCCC, Norway's official statement said, "To have a successful outcome of the Climate Conference in Paris, it is important that countries submit their contributions on emission reductions well in advance of the meeting, and that they are ambitious. Our target is well in line with the emission reductions that are needed to meet the two degree target".

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Study sounds SOS on river pollution

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 26 Maret 2015 | 22.33

NEW DELHI: At a time when the country's national river Ganga has caught the attention of policymakers, a new report of India's key pollution watchdog -Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) -has noted that the number of polluted river stretches in the country increased from 150 to 302 in the past over five years, indicating how other rivers too are victims of constant neglect.

A total of 532 townscities fall along the polluted stretches of different rivers across the country. In comparison, the Ganga river basin states of Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal have 118 such stretches.

While Prime Minister Narendra Modi will review the Centre's action plan to rejuvenate the river Ganga in a high-level meeting on Thursday, he and his Cabinet colleagues including water resources minister Uma Bharti can hardly afford to ignore the crisis facing other rivers. It is expected that Modi, ex-officio chairman of the National Ganga River Basin Authority (NGRBA), would try to deliver a message across the nation about other rivers as well. Although the meeting on Thursday is meant to review the `Namami Gange' schemes of the government, the Centre is keen to replicate the best practices of Ganga rejuvenation plan to clean up other rivers of the country in due course.

Chief ministers of Uttarakhand,UP ,Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal are expected to attend the meeting in their capacities as members of the NGRBA that has been monitoring planning and execution of all schemes relating to Ganga rejuvenation.

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Activists protest against Yamuna pollution

AGRA/MATHURA: Activists gathered along the banks of the Yamuna here to demand an early clean up of the river that is the lifeline to millions in northern India.

Dozens of people offered special prayers on the river bank and sought the cleaning of the ghats and the demolition of illegal structures along the river.

Music maestro Acharya Jaimini said in Vrindavan that concretization of the river banks was proceeding at an alarming pace.

In Agra, a meeting of the activists demanded to know what happened to the huge sums of money spent on supposedly cleaning the 1,376-km river.

"Thousands of crores of rupees have gone down the drain in the past two decades," activist Shravan Kumar Singh moaned.

The activists demanded a "white paper" on all the expenditure incurred by Uttar Pradesh and central authorities on cleaning the river.

One activist, Anand Rai, said the treatment plants along the river bank were not working and all the sewage of Agra was flowing directly into the river.

"It is a criminal offence to pollute community water resources, but the UP Pollution Control Board officials are sleeping," Rai said.

Abhinaya Prasad of Adhar, an NGO, drew attention to the heaps of leather cuttings from shoe units piled up along the river bank, polluting the water.

Chandra Kant Tripathi, registrar of the Central Hindi Institute in Agra, suggested construction of new ghats along the river and monitoring of the treatment plants.

"If the river survived and was restored to good health, Agra will see a revival from the present decadence and degeneration," he added.

"Right now everyone is dumping polythene bags and all the waste into the river which is bad. The River Police formed some years ago is nowhere to be seen," said Surendra Sharma, president of the Braj Heritage Society.

The Yamuna originates at Yamunotri in Uttarakhand and merges with the Ganga in Allahabad.

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HC seeks Centre's action plan to curb air pollution in Delhi

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 25 Maret 2015 | 22.33

NEW DELHI: Observing that air pollution in the national capital was "terrible", Delhi High Court today directed the Centre as well as an amicus curiae to prepare an action plan with suggestions to address the issue.

A bench of justices B D Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva said effects of air pollution in Delhi were clearly visible and no monitoring stations were required to show that it was "terrible".

"Particulate matter, benzene, sulphur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and carbon monoxide (CO) are the culprits. Now we need to find out why it is happening and the remedial measures that need to be taken," it said.

Justice Ahmed also said that while judges interested in an issue are not supposed to hear it, he was hearing the matter despite being a "victim of air pollution in Delhi".

The bench had taken suo motu cognizance of the issue after taking note of a report that said Delhi was the most polluted city in the world.

Perusing a report filed by amicus curiae Kailash Vasudev, the bench noted that particulate matter (PM) was the highest contributor to bad air quality in the city as it had far exceeded the standard levels of 100 micrograms per cubic meter of air.

In some areas, PM was found to be 400, the court noted and said the levels of the pollutant were "out of control".

The other "culprits", SO2, NO2, CO and benzene, a carcinogen, were products of vehicular and airplane emissions which were found to be high in areas like R K Puram, IGI Airport, Civil Lines, Karol Bagh and other congested areas.

It also asked whether Delhi Pollution Control Committee was concerned over the terrible pollution levels as even the Ridge area showed very bad air quality.

One of the reasons cited by the amicus for increase in air pollution in Delhi was the reduction of forest cover to 15 per cent and fewer notified green areas.

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Development of country while protecting environment possible: Javadekar

MUMBAI: Union minister of state for Environment and Forests Prakash Javadekar today said the Centre will strive to implement the developmental projects in the country without damaging the environment.

Sharing the government's plan for balanced growth at an interactive session on 'Balancing Environment with Development' here, he said on one hand we will take forward the agenda of development and on the other, we have taken the pledge of protection of the environment.

Javadekar dispelled the notion that development and environment are two opposites and expressed his government's commitment to undertake development while protecting the environment, an official release said this evening.

He said his government had approved several projects which were pending for environmental approval.

"With a clear vision, use of technology and involvement of the people, we will bring about positive development in the country," Javadekar said.

By 2025, the government will implement the River Improvement project, wherein all the rivers will be cleaned and improved, he said.

This project will start with the Ganga River Improvement project, Javadekar said and expressed confidence that by 2025, energy efficiency would be increased by 20 to 25 per cent.

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Time running out for wild elephants say experts

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 24 Maret 2015 | 22.33

KASANE (Botswana) : African elephants could be extinct in the wild within a few decades, experts warned at a major conservation summit in Botswana that highlighted an alarming decline in numbers due to poaching for ivory.

The Africa Elephant Summit, held at a tourist resort in Kasane, gathered delegates from about 20 countries across Europe, Africa and Asia, including China -- which is accused of fuelling the illegal poaching trade.

"This species could be extinct in our lifetime, within one or two decades, if the current trend continues," Dune Ives, senior researcher at Vulcan, a philanthropic organisation run by US billionaire Paul Allen, said.

"In five years we may have lost the opportunity to save this magnificent and iconic animal."

The conference heard latest figures from the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which reported that the African elephant population had dropped from 550,000 in 2006 to 470,000 in 2013.

East Africa has seen the worst decline, from 150,000 to about 100,000.

"The overall objective of this meeting is to secure commitments at the highest political level to effectively protect the elephants and significantly reduce the trends of killings of elephants," said Elias Magosi, from the Botswanan environment ministry.

"The current killing rate is unsustainable and the population of African elephants is in danger."

Elephant hunting is often organised by international criminal networks to supply the illegal ivory market, mainly in Asia, with some profits thought to fund regional conflicts and militants.

"These syndicates take advantage of conflicts, social unrest, poor governance," Magosi said.

TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring group, said ivory trading routes demonstrated the flow from Kenya and Tanzania to transit countries including Vietnam and Philippines, before going on final markets in China and Thailand.

There, the ivory is sculpted into jewellery or art pieces that are prized by the wealthy.

"Thailand is still a country of great concern," Tom Milliken of TRAFFIC said.

"(But) China is the most important country that we are dealing with in the world with respect to illegal ivory trade."

Tshekedi Khama, Botswanan minister of tourism and wildlife, also railed against China, saying: "Whether we like it or not, the determining fact and the end result is totally in the hands of China."

Participants told AFP that during a closed discussion at the conference, a Chinese delegate complained that the country was being unfairly targeted and should be considered an ally in fight to save the elephant.

The delegate said China funds anti-poaching efforts in Africa and is strengthening legislation.

The conference follows up a 2013 meeting when 30 countries adopted a set of urgent conservation measures, including a call to unite against poaching and for improved criminal prosecution.

"We need a lot of collaboration," said Kelly Landen from Elephants Without Borders.

"Elephant are crossing frontiers and moving from safe areas to poaching areas. This need to be addressed. But we are moving in the right way."

On Wednesday, the Conference on Illegal Wildlife Trade (IWT) will also meet in Kasane to focus on the trafficking of all threatened species -- an illegal trade worth $19 billion a year, according to the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Ivory is reportedly bought at $100 per kilogramme ($45 per pound) from poachers, and sold for $2,100 in China.

Julian Blanc, an elephant specialist for the Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), said the link between poverty in Africa and poaching highlighted one way to tackle the illegal killing of elephants.

"We have monitored a direct correlation between human infant mortality (a measure of poverty) at district level and levels of poaching," he said.

"In places where there is high level of infant mortality and poverty, we monitored the highest level of elephant poaching... so addressing poverty is a significant component of elephant conservation."

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India should prepare to face extreme weather, warn scientists

BENGALURU: Around the same time as Cyclone Pam flattened the tiny Pacific island nation of Vanuatu early this month, untimely rains and hailstorms lashed Maharashtra in India destroying at least 5.5 million hectares of winter crops.

That was a big jolt to the nation still recovering from the worst calamity of its kind in Uttarakhand in June 2013 when thousands perished in flooding and landslides induced by heavy rains and, in September 2014, from the flash floods in Srinagar, the deadliest to hit the valley in 60 years.

The list of extreme weather events that crippled life in India in recent times gets longer when one includes the July 26, 2005, downpour -- the heaviest in recorded history -- that flooded the entire city of Mumbai and the August 6, 2010, cloudburst in Leh that dumped 14 inches of rain in two hours.

It was not just the extreme rain events that have surprised weathermen. The longest heat wave that swept northern India in June 2014 drove Delhi's temperature to 47.6 degrees Celsius, the hottest in 62 years.

According to Global Climate Risk Index, published by Germanwatch, India is one of the three countries (besides the Philippines and Cambodia) affected by the most extreme weather events in 2013.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has predicted that "rainfall patterns in peninsular India will become more and more erratic, with a possible decrease in overall rainfall, but an increase in extreme weather events".

Indian climatologists agree. "There has been a 50 percent increase in extreme rainfall events during the past 50 years in India," Jayaraman Srinivasan, chairman of the Divecha Centre for Climate Change in Bengaluru, wrote in the journal Current Science after the Uttarakhand disaster.

"During the past few months there have been a few unusual weather events but there is no clear indication that these are related to global warming," Srinivasan told IANS.

"I would argue that earth's weather and climate are governed by non-linear processes, and hence one should expect unusual weather events now and then."

He, however, added that "extreme rainfall events will increase as global warming proceeds unabated, and hence it is absolutely essential for us to be prepared to tackle more extreme rainfall events in the future".

Bhupendra Nath Goswami, former director of the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) in Pune, says his studies have shown that the occurrence of "extreme rainfall events" had been increasing over the country in the last five-six decades.

"We can say with a high degree of confidence that this increasing trend is due to global warming," Goswami told IANS.

Global warming, Goswami said, "increases the moisture holding capacity of the atmosphere and makes it more convectively unstable, facilitating a stronger rain event.

"Because the atmosphere has become more unstable over the whole country, one or more such events can occur anywhere at a given time."

Goswami said that all climate models predict an increasing trend of these extreme events into the future.

Therefore, "there is strong reason to prepare ourselves to face the potential disasters associated with increasing frequency and intensity of these events".

"This erratic behaviour is a regional manifestation of climate change," says R. Krishnan, a senior scientist at IITM, who has made a detailed analysis of long-term climate data sets.

"Our findings show that the pronounced surface warming of the Tibetan Plateau has altered the spatial distribution of atmospheric temperature, strengthened the sub-tropical westerly winds over the region and created favourable conditions for increased variability of the Western Disturbances activity," Krishnan told IANS.

Western disturbance is a low pressure system that originates over the Mediterranean sea and moves eastwards, bringing winter rain and snow to the north-western parts of the Indian subcontinent.

Some British scientists suggest a possible link between the extreme events in mid-latitudes and rapid loss of the ice cap that covers the Arctic Ocean.

How will the extreme rainfall events impact Indian agriculture?

According to Minister of State for Agriculture Sanjeev Balyan, an analysis by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research has revealed that nearly 81.3 million hectares of area spread over 122 districts in 11 states may suffer from extreme weather events.

He recently told parliament a study predicted an 18 percent reduction in crop yields for maize and six percent for wheat and rice by 2020.

The impact on agriculture in the Ganges river basin -- the largest food producing region in India -- may be particularly pronounced according to a report in the journal Climatic Change by scientists of the Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur.

On the basis of Regional Climate Model simulations they predict that the Gangetic basin may face an increasing incidence of "precipitation extremes" during summer months in future. Crop productivity of wheat is expected to reduce, they report.

Another Global Climate Model simulation study by researchers at the CSIR-Fourth Paradigm Institute in Bengaluru shows "intensification of extreme rainfall over most parts of India by the end of the century".

According to their report in Current Science, the increase in temperature, coupled with a decline in rainfall in the west coast, will have drastic consequences on the production of crops.

"Over other regions, increases in heavy precipitation can increase surface run-off and lead to intense floods and landslides."

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Climate change puts Britain at risk of mosquito-borne diseases

Written By Unknown on Senin, 23 Maret 2015 | 22.33

LONDON: Climate change could accelerate the emergence of vector-borne diseases such as chikungunya, dengue fever, and West Nile virus in Britain, says a new study.

The findings detailed in the journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases indicate that vector-borne diseases, which are transmitted by insects such as mosquitoes and ticks, are on the rise and have spread into new territories across Europe — malaria in Greece, West Nile virus in eastern Europe, chikungunya in Italy and France — over the past decade.

"We are not suggesting that climate change is the only or the main factor driving the increase in vector-borne diseases in the UK and Europe, but that it is one of many factors," said professor Steve Leach from Public Health England, UK Department of Health.

Disease-carrying mosquitoes could become widespread across large parts of Britain within the next few decades as the climate becomes increasingly mild, the authors pointed out.

More rainfall and warmer temperatures could provide ideal conditions for the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus), which spreads the viruses that cause dengue and chikungunya, to breed and expand in Britain, particularly southern England, they added.

Previously dengue transmission was largely confined to tropical and subtropical regions because freezing temperatures kill the mosquito's larvae and eggs, but rising temperatures could enable A albopictus to survive across large parts of England and Wales within decades.

Climate change models indicate that just a two degree Celsius rise in temperature could extend the mosquito's activity season by one month and geographical spread by up to 30 per cent by 2030, the researchers noted.

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Time running out for wild elephants: experts

BOTSWANA: African elephants could be extinct in the wild within a few decades, experts warned on Monday at a major conservation summit in Botswana that highlighted an alarming decline in numbers due to poaching.

The Africa Elephant Summit, held at a tourist resort in Kasane, gathered delegates from about 20 countries across Europe, Africa and Asia, including China — which is accused of fuelling the illegal poaching trade.

"This species could be extinct in our lifetime if the current trend continues..., within one or two decades," Dune Ives, senior researcher at Vulcan, a philanthropic organisation run by US billionaire Paul Allen, said.

"In five years we may have lost the opportunity to save this magnificent and iconic animal."

The conference heard latest figures from the International Union for Conservation of Nature, which reported that the African elephant population had dropped from 550,000 in 2006 to 470,000 in 2013.

East Africa has seen the worst decline, from 150,000 to about 100,000. "The overall objective of this meeting is to secure commitments at the highest political level to effectively protect the elephants and significantly reduce the trends of killings of elephants," said Elias Magosi, from the Botswanan environment ministry.

"The current killing rate is unsustainable and the population of African elephant is in danger."

Elephant hunting is often organised by international criminal networks to supply the illegal ivory market, mainly in Asia, with some profits thought to fund regional conflicts and militants.

"These syndicates take advantage of conflicts, social unrest, poor governance," Magosi said.

TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring group, said ivory trading routes showed the flow from Kenya and Tanzania to transit countries including Malaysia, Vietnam and Philippines, before going on final markets in China and Thailand.

"Thailand is still a country of great concern," Tom Milliken of TRAFFIC said.

"(But) China is the most important country that we are dealing with in the world with respect to illegal ivory trade."

The conference follows up a 2013 meeting when 30 countries adopted a set of urgent conservation measures, including a call to unite against poaching and for improved criminal prosecution.

On Wednesday, the Conference on Illegal Wildlife Trade (IWT) will also meet in Kasane to focus on the trafficking of all threatened species -- an illegal trade worth $19 billion a year, according to the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Ivory is reportedly bought at $100 per kilogramme ($45 per pound) from poachers, and sold for $2,100 in China.

Julian Blanc, an elephant specialist for the Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), said the link between poverty in Africa and poaching highlighted one way to tackle the illegal killing of elephants.

"We have monitored a direct correlation between human infant mortality (a measure of poverty) at district level and levels of poaching," he said.

"In places where there is high level of infant mortality and poverty, we monitored the highest level of elephant poaching..., so addressing poverty is a significant component of elephant conservation."

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Campaign to protect Gangetic dolphins

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 22 Maret 2015 | 22.33

KOLKATA: To protect the endangered Gangetic river dolphins here and in nearby districts, a three-day campaign is being run on a cruise.

The 'River for Life' campaign by WWF was kicked off here yesterday on a cruise from the Millennium Park under which they are conducting a series of conservation action with the local community at different points across the length of nearly 200 km from Kolkata to Nabadwip.

Saswati Sen, state director of WWF, said during their journey they are interacting with children and youth from schools and colleges near the river to sensitise them.

"We are meeting thousands of people in places like Belur, Sobhabazar, Chinsurah, Chandannagar, to spread awareness on the need to keep the Ganga clean and protect dolphin which is our national aquatic animal," she said.

Besides meetings, film shows and quiz contests are being conducted by the team of activists. They are also distributing pamphlets for mass awareness.

Weighing around 150-170 kg, the number of the species is estimated to be less than 2,000 in India.

West Bengal is yet to do a survey on its number. Experts sitting on board the cruise sighted at least 12 dolphins during the journey.

It is a spectacular sight for commuters crossing the river Hooghly, as Ganges is known in West Bengal, to see the greyish brown dolphin jumping in and out of water.

Commonly known as 'Susuk', dolphin's skin makes it easy to spot in the expanse of water.

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Rs 25-cr farm house, Rs 5-crore City Park blown up to clear green belt

INDORE: In one of the biggest action against illegal construction, Indore Municipal Corporation (IMC) on Friday blew up Khambati Farm House and City Park following a go ahead from Indore bench of Madhya Pradesh High Court. These structures were constructed on the green belt.

Businessman Saifuddin Khambati's farm house, which boasted of an international-standard swimming pool, a tennis court, a badminton court, an outhouse, a club house, a horse stable with high-bred horses worth Rs 25 lakh each. The farm house was decorated with intricate designs and costly plants, spread over around 3 acres of land on Annapurna Road was blown up using around 10 kg gun power. Estimated cost, according to IMC sources, of the farm house is Rs 25 crore.

Similarly, City Park, owned by a businessman Lokesh Agrawal spread over two acres in Rajendra Nagar, was also reduced to debris by using around 5 kg gun power. Estimated cost of City Park, claim sources in IMC, is Rs 5 crore.

"Between 2 pm and 5 pm, we carried out three dynamite blasts to blow up the structures and used around 15 kg of gun powder," said deputy commissioner of IMC MS Chouhan adding that despite this they were not able to demolish the entire structure. It will take another two days to completely demolish the structure.

Chouhan said with the help of blast expert they drilled buildings and carried out three blasts, two at Khambati Farm House and one at City Park. "Walls were so strong that JCB machine was not able to bulldoze them. So we had to use gunpowder to blow up the structure," said Chouhan adding that removal was carried out after HC vacated stay on demolition.

Earlier, IMC had issued notices for demolition of construction on green belt. Following which owners of structures managed to obtain stay from court.

However, on Friday HC vacated stay on demolition paving the way for removal of illegal construction.

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Chinese airline completes cooking oil fuel flight

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 21 Maret 2015 | 22.33

SHANGHAI: A Chinese airline on Saturday completed the country's first commercial flight using biofuel, made from waste cooking oil, as the government seeks to promote greater environmental sustainability.

A Hainan Airlines flight from commercial hub Shanghai to Beijing used biofuel supplied by China National Aviation Fuel company and energy giant Sinopec, according to a statement from US aircraft giant Boeing.

The Boeing 737 plane used a 50-50 mix of conventional jet fuel and biofuel made from "waste cooking oil collected from restaurants in China," it said. A Boeing spokeswoman confirmed to AFP that the flight was completed today.

Used cooking oil, called "gutter oil" in Chinese, has been the target of media exposes about how the waste product is sometimes illegally reused for human consumption.

Sinopec, which was criticized in the Chinese environmental documentary "Under the Dome", said waste oil could be put to better use.

"This fully represents an earnest commitment from Sinopec to continuously advance scientific and technological innovation, and promote green and low-emission development," Sinopec said in the statement.

The world's first flight powered entirely by biofuel took place in 2012 when a plane took off from the Canadian capital Ottawa, but several commercial aircraft have used biofuels mixed with traditional petroleum-based jet fuel.

Australia's Qantas and Air Canada have both tested biofuel on commercial flights.

Last year, Boeing announced it would co-operate with the Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China to develop aviation biofuel. It has a similar project with a research institute under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

China is a key market for Boeing, which estimates the country will need 6,020 planes worth USD 870 billion through 2033.

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95 industrial units in Bengal shut down on NGT's orders

KOLKATA: The West Bengal Pollution Control Board (WBPCB) has shut down 95 industrial units in the state in accordance with a National Green Tribunal judgement, an official said on Friday.

"The National Green Tribunal in November last year had said in its judgement that industries operating without the consent of the board and having no effluent treatment plant should be closed down immediately. As many as 95 units were closed down," WBPCB chairman Kalyan Rudra said here on Friday at a seminar on the eve of World Water Day (March 22).

He also highlighted the issue of depletion of ground water in the state.

"Out of the 341 blocks in Bengal, 174 blocks had registered annual depletion of ground water of 20 cm," Rudra said, stressing on "less dependence on ground water and increased use of surface water".

He had earlier revealed that in Bengal, ground water in 81 blocks is contaminated with arsenic and in 49 blocks with fluoride.

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House sparrows flying away from cities

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 20 Maret 2015 | 22.33

INDORE: Loss of nesting sites and absence of food, particularly insects, are leading to fast reduction in the number of house sparrows (passer domesticus), most commonly spotted bird, in cities and urban areas. In last few years, the bird has gone completely missing from most urban neighbourhoods, however, they can still be spotted in rural areas.

"You won't find sparrows in jungles, deserts or places where there is no human habitation. The sparrow is a species that is always found in and around human habitations and as it prefers to nest in manmade structures such as cavities in walls, around streetlight poles, pipes emerging out of buildings and so on," said ornithologist Ajay Gadikar. However, architecturally modern buildings have no space for birds which is forcing them to move away from cities.

Nowadays, houses and buildings in cities are built with minimum outer projections and everything is concealed inside walls. Furthermore, modern buildings also have fewer holes and crevices.

Moreover, a dearth of food is driving sparrows away from cities. Insects are no longer found in towns due to rampant use of chemicals to kill pests. "Sparrows need to find plenty of aphids and caterpillars to feed their young ones, especially in first few days after hatching," said Gadikar.

He said the only possible way to keep sparrows in cities is to put nest boxes (bird houses) outside houses and bird feeders with grains to feed them. He said a nest box with circular hole, of around 10 cm diameter, should be kept at a height of 2 metres above the ground to shield it from cats.

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Arctic sea ice is smallest size on record this winter

OSLO: Arctic sea ice this year is the smallest in winter since satellite records began in 1979, in a new sign of long-term climate change, US data showed on Thursday.

The ice floating on the Arctic Ocean around the North Pole reached its maximum annual extent of just 14.54 million square km (5.61 million sq miles) on February 25 — slightly bigger than Canada — and is now expected to shrink with a spring thaw.

"This year's maximum ice extent was the lowest in the satellite record, with below-average ice conditions everywhere except in the Labrador Sea and Davis Strait," the US National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) said in a statement.

A late season surge in ice was still possible, it said. The ice was 1.1 million sq km smaller than the 1981-2010 average, and below the previous lowest maximum in 2011.


Polar bears at the edge of a ice cap in the North Pole. (Getty Images photo)

With the return of the sun to the Arctic after months of winter darkness, the ice shrinks to a minimum in September.

The UN panel of climate scientists links the long-term shrinkage of the ice, by 3.8 per cent a decade since 1979, to global warming and says Arctic summertime sea ice could vanish in the second half of the century.

"The majority of models point in the same direction — less ice," said Sebastian Gerland, an expert at the Norwegian Polar Institute. And he said far less ice was surviving more than one winter — such ice is often thickest and most resilient.

The UN's World Meteorological Organization says 2014 was the warmest year since records began in the 19th century. Almost 200 nations have agreed to work out a deal in December in Paris to slow global warming.


Vintage map of American explorer Robert Peary's 1909 North Pole expedition routes. (GraphicaArtis/Getty Images photo)

The Arctic thaw is disrupting indigenous hunting lifestyles in the Arctic while making the region more accessible. But low oil prices have discouraged exploration and tensions between the west and Russia have limited interest in Arctic shipping.

"This new data on sea ice loss sends a clear message to the global community that the Arctic is unravelling, warming twice as fast as the rest of the planet," Rafe Pomerance, chair of Arctic 21, a group of environmental groups, said in a statement.

At the other end of the planet, the NSIDC said earlier this month that sea ice around Antarctica was the fourth-smallest for summer. Climate scientists say the apparently contradictory trend may be tied to changing winds and currents.


Birds flying by icebergs floating on Arctic water under cloudy sky. (Getty Images photo)

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Singapore introduces commercial solar tariff to reduce fossil fuel reliance

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 19 Maret 2015 | 22.33

SINGAPORE: Singapore is taking steps to reduce its almost total reliance on fossil fuels in power generation by offering commercial customers the city-state's first dual solar and conventional electricity contract.

Singapore generates 95 per cent of its power from natural gas and currently has only 25-30 megawatt-peak (MW) of photovoltaic capacity installed, around 8 per cent of the national target of 350 MW by 2020.

Together with Oslo-listed Renewable Energy Corporation (REC), Singapore's PacificLight Energy (PLE) is offering a hybrid electricity bundle to commercial and industrial users that consume at least 4,000 kilowatt-hour (kWh) a month.

Under the collaboration, consumers can consolidate two streams of costs — one to REC for solar-generated electricity at a fixed cost per kWh, the other to PacificLight at prevailing grid prices — into a single bill, unlike most set-ups where consumers have to pay the solar seller and power generator separately.

"Once you have made the (solar panel) instalment, you are not subject to any (price) volatility," said PacificLight's chief executive officer Yu Tat Ming.

Solar power use is rising fast around the world as module prices are down 75 per cent since 2009. Singapore's electricity tariff, by contrast, rose by almost a third between 2009 and 2013, official data shows, driven by a tight oil and gas market during that time.

The relatively high electricity price and falling solar costs have helped Singapore join a host of countries, including most of Europe, the United States and Japan, to achieve grid parity, in which solar costs break even with electricity sale revenues, Deutsche Bank estimates showed.

The bank said in its 2015 solar outlook that solar systems will be at grid parity in up to 80 per cent of the global market within three years and that grid parity without subsidies already existed in many regions.

The International Energy Agency says that solar energy could dominate global electricity markets by 2050. The technology is already in use on a large scale in parts of Europe and the United States, and China raised its target of solar installations by 20 per cent in order to fight pollution.

While the recent oil price tumble has challenged the solar energy business, REC's chief executive Martin Cooper said the continual decline in solar module prices would ensure competitiveness.

"It's a minor hiccup. For a 40 year plan to do something, this afternoon's price is just blip," Cooper said.

Brent crude prices have tumbled by as much as 60 per cent since its peak in June last year as high output clashes with slowing economic growth and improving energy efficiency.

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Air pollution level in Delhi exceeds WHO limits

NEW DELHI: The level of air pollution in Delhi exceeds the limits prescribed by the World Health Organisation (WHO), government said in Rajya Sabha on Thursday.

The air quality monitoring data for Delhi provided by Central Pollution Control Board indicates that the levels of particulate matter (PM2.5) exceed the WHO guidelines by a "factor of 7 to 12", environment minister Prakash Javadekar said.

WHO published Air Quality Guidelines for Europe in 1987 and 2000. A global update was brought out in 2005 by WHO. India took into account the norms while revisiting and notifying the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), comprising 12 pollutants.

The Minister said "the data of air quality monitored by the Greenpeace in five schools of Delhi are exceeding and are in similar range". He, however, did not name the schools.

Javadekar, while replying to questions, said Delhi government has come out with a long term and short term measures last month so as to improve ambient air quality in the capital.

"The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change has aked for a time targeted implementation plan by March 31, 2015," he said.

The Minister further said a comprehensive air quality index would be launched and monitoring stations will be set up on 66 cities having population of 10 lakh or more.

He said government has taken various measures to contain air pollution in the country, including supply of cleaner fuels, stringent source specific emission standards for air polluting industries and implementation of revised emission norms for gensets and cement plants.

To another question, Javadekar said the details were yet to be finalised by his ministry on acceptance of the TSR Subramanian Committee recommendation for enactment of a new umbrella law 'Environment Laws (Management) Act.

At the same time, he added that every recommendation of may not be accepted by the government.

The minister also said that as per a survey conducted by the OECD in 2007 'Ranking Port Cities with High Exposure and Vulnerability to Climate Extremes', which assumes a mean sea-level rise of 0.5 meter by 2070, Kolkata is identified as "amongst the cities most vulnerable" to the rising sea level and storm surges.

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Mining operations to resume in Goa

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 18 Maret 2015 | 22.33

NEW DELHI: Mining operations in Goa are set to resume after the environment ministry decided to revoke its 2012 order that kept in abeyance environment clearances (ECs) granted to all the mining leases in the state.

But the Centre will ask the Goa government to strictly monitor the annual production at 20 million tonnes as capped by the Supreme Court in its April, 2014 order while lifting the ban. An official notification is expected to be issued shortly .

Though the Goa government had also, in January, revoked its previous order on suspension of mining operations, the environment ministry's decision - taken under the UPA government - to keep in abeyance the green clearances was the only technical hurdle in resumption of mining.

"We have decided to revoke the ministry's previous order by following the Supreme Court directives.The state, in its earlier decision in the wake of the MB Shah Commission report, had suspended all mining.That had created unemployment and loss of income to the country ," said environment minister Prakash Javadekar on Tuesday .

Speaking to reporters at Parliament House, he said the Goa government will now have to decide on ore extraction limits for individual mines in the state, so that extraction does not exceed the annual cap of 20 million tonnes for all mining output generated in the state. Javadekar said, "We have cleared the last hurdle for resumption of mining. It is up to the (mining) industry now."

The environment minister's statement comes within hours of Goa Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar expressing helplessness in drafting the state's budget for 2015-16 which is to be presented on March 25.He reportedly told the local media that his government did not want to table the budget without the environment ministry revoking the suspensions of ECs of mining leases.

Parsekar is learnt to have met Javadekar twice on the issue last month. He reportedly told him that the state government wanted to consider the revenue from the mining industry before finalizing the budget.

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Rare black spotted turtles seized along India-Bangladesh border

KOLKATA: The Border Security Force (BSF), on Wednesday, seized 97 rare Asian black spotted turtles close to the India-Bangladesh border. The turtles, being smuggled into Bangladesh near the Kalanchi Border Outpost in the Gaighata police station area of North 24-Parganas are valued at nearly Rs 58.20 lakh in the international market. This is the second seizure of such turtles near the International Border this year. On January 29, the BSF seized 185 turtles of this species near Kalanchi. That seizure was valued at nearly Rs 1.11 crore in the international market.

"Around 10.40 am, BSF authorities of the BSF 152Bn generated specific intelligence of a consignment of turtles being smuggled to Bangladesh. An ambush was laid to trap the smugglers. When a person was spotted carrying a large bag near the IB, he was challenged. He dropped the bag and fled into thick foliage. When the area was searched, the bag was found. There were 97 turtles inside. Forest department officials identified them as rare Asian black spotted turtles. The turtles have been handed over to customs officials who sent them to the forest department after necessary processing," a BSF officer of the South Bengal Frontier said.

The turtles seized are an Indian species that is in great demand in the international market. It is a medium-sized freshwater turtle from South Asia. Though it is known as an 'Asian' turtle, the colour varies from country to country. The rigid upper shell of 'carapace' ranges from reddish to dark brown and black and often has three yellowish ridges running along its length.

The underside or 'plastron' is a uniform brown with a light trim around the edge. The head of the Indian black turtle may have orange or yellow spots. The intensity of these spots varies between the six sub-species. The Asian black spotted turtles are also known as the Bengal black turtle, black pond turtle, Burmese black turtle, Cochin black turtle, Parker's black turtle and Sri Lanka black turtle.

"In some places, these turtles are hunted for their meat. Elsewhere, they are exploited for the pet trade. These threats are more severe in countries like Bangladesh and Myanmar. In these countries, the animal is highly endangered. The species is also threatened in western Thailand where the major threats are hunting and loss of habitat. In certain south-east Asian markets, these turtles fetch a price of $2,000 a piece. This is the biggest seizure or rare Asian black spotted turtles in recent times," a forest department official said.

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World Bank, UK to help poor nations hit by natural disasters

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 17 Maret 2015 | 22.33

SENDAI: Some good news for the developing countries. The World Bank and the UK government has jointly launched a new competitive challenge fund that would help poor nations -- those hit by disasters like floods, cyclones, droughts and earthquakes -- to empower their local communities.

The fund, launched on Monday on the sidelines of UN's 3rd World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction at Sendai, will help developing countries design and implement ground-breaking solutions to overcome problems they face assessing disaster risks.

"Finding new ways to use technological innovation to empower communities to build their own solutions to the risk of disasters has proven effective from Nepal to New Orleans," said Rachel Kyte, World Bank group vice-president and special envoy for Climate change. The fund is launched by World Bank's Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery with the UK government.

The new fund will help spur new and inventive approaches and partnerships so that the developing countries can better gauge disaster risks, he said. In its first phase the Challenge Fund will provide between $20,000 and $150,000 to up to 20 projects.

The experience in last decade shows frequency of natural disasters have increased two-fold, compared to what it was 30 years ago with the annual economic losses rising from $50 billion to almost $200 billion. "To limit the human and financial cost, it is vital that countries understand the risks and how to reduce the impact of natural disasters on individuals, communities, and governments," a GFDRR and World Bank press note said.

"World-class innovations and data tools can save lives but global investment in these new technologies remains far too low and is not keeping pace with the growing risk countries face."

The Challenge Fund aims to help decision makers in developing countries to make the best use of technology and data through new approaches and innovative partnerships between technology companies, NGOs and those at risk from natural disasters.

With the new Fund grant organizations will be able to build capacity and respond to DRR challenges. It will help them access high resolution digital models of an area's train and elevation; identify and collect missing data that undermines countries' ability to understand the risks they face; develop new approaches to modeling risk; and initiatives to communicating risk to different stakeholders.

The GFDRR helps high-risk, low-income developing countries better understand and reduce their vulnerabilities to natural hazards, and adapt to climate change. It is working with over 400 partners-mostly local government agencies, civil society, and technical organizations. GFDRR is managed by the World Bank and funded by 25 donor partners.

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Climate change, migration burdening urban areas in Bay of Bengal

KOLKATA: Rising urban population following forced migration from rural areas is a result of climate change and poses a burden upon urban risk-reduction efforts, aver experts from Bay of Bengal countries.

Participating in a sub-regional workshop here last week, the experts adopted a 'Charter for Disaster Risk Reduction' with key policy recommendations for the ongoing World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction (WCDRR) in Sendai, Japan. The document also brought to the fore the need to localise disaster risk-reduction (DRR) approaches, said a statement made available on Tuesday.

The charter was adopted at the third sub-regional workshop on "Community resilience to climate change in Bay of Bengal" with more than 120 representatives, including members of parliaments and legislative bodies, from India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal participating.

"The trend of rising urban population with continuous and large inflow of migrants from rural to urban areas is creating several challenges in both rural and urban areas. The forced migration as a result of climate impact is adding burden to manage urban risk reduction efforts," said the charter.

The charter said: "Urban centres must have the plan to address the issues for migrants to the cities and develop a comprehensive strategy to promote resilience with necessary skills to address their vulnerabilities."

The document also emphasized the necessity to strengthen institutional instruments to support data management, habitat planning and capacity building.

"Weak resource management as well as faulty development design and initiatives have created several challenges in urban areas such as flood, health related problems," the statement said citing the charter.

Other key recommendations in the charter focused on the importance of inclusion of social parameters in the "implementation and monitoring frameworks, with focus on impacts and not only activities".

"A highly pertinent response needs specific attention to engage with youth and children to facilitate a safe school model and ensure the sustenance of the child friendly environment in disaster context," said the charter.

The charter also called for strengthening the linkages between science, policy and practice for a comprehensive engagement finally resulting in policies and strategies that lead to benefits for the communities at risk.

Spearheaded by global agencies such as Concern Worldwide and BCAS-Bangladesh, SEEDS Asia and others, the workshop and the subsequent charter also advocated the evolution and establishment of monitoring mechanisms for "rigorously keeping track of impact on community level, besides conduct of activities".

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Two zoo elephants to be unchained & kept in special enclosure

Written By Unknown on Senin, 16 Maret 2015 | 22.33

INDORE: Following the directions of the Madhya Pradesh High Court, a pair of elephants who had been chained at the city zoo for nearly a decade would be set free and shifted to an open enclosure there soon.

"Due to their aggressive nature, male tusker Moti and female elephant Champa had been chained. But now, in compliance with the court order, the shackles would be removed and they would be shifted to an enclosure spread over an area of 1.25 acres at the Kamla Nehru Zoo," in-charge of the zoo Uttam Yadav told PTI today.

"Hopefully, the duo would be shifted into their new home this month itself as the work on construction of the enclosure, at a cost of around Rs 60 lakh, is nearing completion," he said.

Both elephants, aged around 48 years, belong to the Makhna breed. The life span of this breed is 70-75 years, he added.

According to Yadav, Moti had been a member of the zoo since the last 25 years, but was chained after he attacked some visitors. "Once he also attacked his mahaut (master), leaving him seriously injured.

However, following a petition filed by an organisation working for animal rights, the high court had directed the Kamala Nehru Zoo authorities last year to unchain the animals and construct an open enclosure for them.

While hearing the petition, experts opined that because of their volatile nature, Moti and Champa could neither be set free in the zoo, nor released in the forest as they are not used to forest life.

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World Bank, UK to help poor nations hit by natural disasters

SENDAI: Some good news for the developing countries. The World Bank and the UK government has jointly launched a new competitive challenge fund that would help poor nations -- those hit by disasters like floods, cyclones, droughts and earthquakes -- to empower their local communities.

The fund, launched on Monday on the sidelines of UN's 3rd World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction at Sendai, will help developing countries design and implement ground-breaking solutions to overcome problems they face assessing disaster risks.

"Finding new ways to use technological innovation to empower communities to build their own solutions to the risk of disasters has proven effective from Nepal to New Orleans," said Rachel Kyte, World Bank group vice-president and special envoy for Climate change. The fund is launched by World Bank's Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery with the UK government.

The new fund will help spur new and inventive approaches and partnerships so that the developing countries can better gauge disaster risks, he said. In its first phase the Challenge Fund will provide between $20,000 and $150,000 to up to 20 projects.

The experience in last decade shows frequency of natural disasters have increased two-fold, compared to what it was 30 years ago with the annual economic losses rising from $50 billion to almost $200 billion. "To limit the human and financial cost, it is vital that countries understand the risks and how to reduce the impact of natural disasters on individuals, communities, and governments," a GFDRR and World Bank press note said.

"World-class innovations and data tools can save lives but global investment in these new technologies remains far too low and is not keeping pace with the growing risk countries face."

The Challenge Fund aims to help decision makers in developing countries to make the best use of technology and data through new approaches and innovative partnerships between technology companies, NGOs and those at risk from natural disasters.

With the new Fund grant organizations will be able to build capacity and respond to DRR challenges. It will help them access high resolution digital models of an area's train and elevation; identify and collect missing data that undermines countries' ability to understand the risks they face; develop new approaches to modeling risk; and initiatives to communicating risk to different stakeholders.

The GFDRR helps high-risk, low-income developing countries better understand and reduce their vulnerabilities to natural hazards, and adapt to climate change. It is working with over 400 partners-mostly local government agencies, civil society, and technical organizations. GFDRR is managed by the World Bank and funded by 25 donor partners.

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Two zoo elephants to be unchained & kept in special enclosure

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 15 Maret 2015 | 22.33

INDORE: Following the directions of the Madhya Pradesh High Court, a pair of elephants who had been chained at the city zoo for nearly a decade would be set free and shifted to an open enclosure there soon.

"Due to their aggressive nature, male tusker Moti and female elephant Champa had been chained. But now, in compliance with the court order, the shackles would be removed and they would be shifted to an enclosure spread over an area of 1.25 acres at the Kamla Nehru Zoo," in-charge of the zoo Uttam Yadav told PTI today.

"Hopefully, the duo would be shifted into their new home this month itself as the work on construction of the enclosure, at a cost of around Rs 60 lakh, is nearing completion," he said.

Both elephants, aged around 48 years, belong to the Makhna breed. The life span of this breed is 70-75 years, he added.

According to Yadav, Moti had been a member of the zoo since the last 25 years, but was chained after he attacked some visitors. "Once he also attacked his mahaut (master), leaving him seriously injured.

However, following a petition filed by an organisation working for animal rights, the high court had directed the Kamala Nehru Zoo authorities last year to unchain the animals and construct an open enclosure for them.

While hearing the petition, experts opined that because of their volatile nature, Moti and Champa could neither be set free in the zoo, nor released in the forest as they are not used to forest life.

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Green India Mission converged with MGNREGA to reclaim forest

NEW DELHI: The government has merged National Mission for a Green India, which aims afforestation at 10 million hectares of land over the next decade, with MGNREGA to increase and improve the country's forest cover.

Modern technology like remote sensing will be used to monitor the progress of this initiative regularly.

Currently, green works such as water harvesting, afforestation and farm foresty are undertaken under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme implemented by Rural Development Ministry.

The government is also eyeing at increasing 10 million hectares of forest cover under the 'National Mission for a Green India' being implemented by the Environment Ministry.

"To further synergise these efforts and to collectively address the climate change concerns, the government has come out with convergence guidelines after consulting both Environment and Rural Development Ministries," a senior government official said.

The convergence guidelines sets out the approach to be adopted to strengthen co-ordination at field-level for developing forest cover and improving forest-based livelihoods for about three million households.

According to the guidelines issued by the Environment Ministry, all lands including village common lands, community lands, revenue wastelands, shifting cultivation areas, wetlands and private agricultural lands will be eligible for afforestation under this convergence.

Under MGNREGA, forest works such as pre-plantation, pit digging, planting and watering, fencing, plant support and protection activities, weeding, mulching and manuring the plants among others can be undertaken for afforestation.

State Forest Development Agencies (SFDA) will provide technical advice on plant species suitable for area, raise nurseries and deliver required plant material to each gram panchayat before July each year meeting the cost from MGNREGA funds.

"However, where there is a shortage of funds under MGNREGA, it may be topped up from Green India Mission funds," the guidelines said.

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Webcast of turtles? mass nesting

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 14 Maret 2015 | 22.33

BERHAMPUR: You can watch the Olive Ridley turtles mass nesting on the sandy shores near the Rushikulya river mouth in Ganjam district at home without going having to go the site, which is about 50 km from here.

The wildlife wing of the forest department is webcasting the unique phenomenon, which started on Thursday. Just log on to www.wildlife.org to watch the natural phenomenon.

"We have decided to webcast the mass nesting of the Olive Ridley turtles at Rushikulya rookery to allow wildlife lovers to witness the unique phenomenon without having to visit the site. The facility has also helped forest officials minimize the crowd that gathers on the spot during the nesting period," said chief wildlife warden S S Srivastav.

"The mass nesting of the turtles was recorded as they Olive Ridleys laid eggs, usually in the early morning. Then it was uploaded on the website for the webcast," said divisional forest officer, Berhampur, S S Mishra. At least two IT professionals and a wildlife scientist were engaged for the purpose, he added.

"The live webcast was not done from the rookery as it might have caused disturbance and posed a hurdle to the turtles because of the light," said another officer.

Earlier, the DFO Berhampur had submitted a proposal to the government for live telecast of the mass nesting of the turtles from the site. But the Rs 40-lakh project was yet to be implemented

Mass nesting of the Olive Ridley turtles, an endangered species, continued for the second day on Friday. One the second day, more than 59,000 turtles laid eggs while 10,000 turtles laid eggs on the first day at the river Rushikulya rookery. Wildlife experts expect that the mass nesting might continue for a few more days as the beach and weather conditions were conducive to the natural phenomenon.

The forest officials have taken several measures to protect the eggs and the turtles. The entire 4.5-km long stretch of beach has been divided into 33 sectors. The area has been totally fenced to prevent visitors from disturbing the turtles.

Around 175 persons, including forest personnel, wildlife activists and people from nearby villages were engaged for round-the-clock vigil to protect the Olive Ridley turtles and the eggs. The vigil will continue over the next 50 days till the hatching takes place, the DFO said.

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Legislature, executive, judiciary voice concern on climate change

NEW DELHI: Legislators, the executive and the judiciary today came on single platform to voice "serious global" concerns posed by climate change and pitched for carrying on "development without destruction" of environment to achieve sustainable growth.

Vice President Hamid Ansari, who inaugurated 'the International Conference on Global Environment Issues' here, said the key environmental challenge a developing country like India faces relate to the nexus of environmental degradation with poverty in its many dimensions and economic growth.

"It is thus important to understand the dichotomous relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation. On one hand, economic growth may result in excessive environmental degradation through use of natural resources and generation of pollution aggravated by institutional failures.

"On the other, economic growth permits improvement in environmental quality by making available the necessary resources for environmental investments and generating societal pressures for improved environmental behaviour, and institutional and policy changes. The latter is most critical to its success," the Vice President said.

Environment and Forest Minister Prakash Javadekar said the government was committed to going for "development without destruction".

He said the ministry was taking policy decisions to overcome the image "inherited" of being a "speed breaker" and "roadblock" in development and his ministry, which was known as "license permit quota raj," has been changed to "public participation ministry."

"Unfortunately, I inherited when people were saying that Environment Ministry has become road block, a speed breaker and some people were saying that you have detroyed the nature. Basically, our goal is development without destruction. So, we will grow but without destruction of nature and take due care of environment.

"We will have flag of environment protection on one hand and that of development in the other. Both have to go together," he said.

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Climate change to drastically alter face of Bengal Bay: Experts

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 13 Maret 2015 | 22.33

KOLKATA: The Bay of Bengal region will undergo a dire and drastic transformation unless urgent action is taken to deal with the disastrous effects of global warming, climate change experts have warned. The observation was made in the city by S Parasuraman, director, Tata Institute of Social Sciences. He was speaking at the 3rd sub-regional workshop on community resilience to climate change in the Bay of Bengal.

The objective of the workshop is to create awareness and shape public opinion regarding the calamitous impact of global warming and climate change, and to enhance community resilience for sustainable development. Apart from Parasuraman, the event was attended by Ambika Prasad Nanda (United Nations Development Programme), Aniruddha Dey (executive director, PRISM), Ardhendu Chatterjee (DRCSC, Kolkata), Sanjay Vasisht (director, CANSA) and Kunal Shah from World Vision India.

The Bay of Bengal harbouring all coastal countries; Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Indonesia have the highest record of disasters historically. The area affected by floods in India more than doubled between 1953 and 2003. In Bangladesh, 60% of the country is already flood-prone. For centuries, farmers, fishermen and others weather dependent livelihoods based communities in the Bay of Bengal region have adapted to periods of climate hardship.

Governments in the Bay of Bengal coast have formulated climate change policy and strengthened their efforts adapting to the adverse effects. In recent years, the development community has become increasingly concerned about damages and losses due to climate change impacts and intensified their efforts in climate change adaptation and risk reduction.

"One of the key groups affected by climate change are the children and youth in these countries and urgent steps need to be taken in order to overcome severe challenges that restrict their development," said Kunal Shah from World Vision India.

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Forest, ecology, wildlife clearances through single portal now

NAGPUR: In order to bring more transparency and accountability in the forest, environment and wildlife clearance process, the ministry of environment, forests and climate change (MoEFCC) is rolling out from March 15 a portal for 'online submission & monitoring of environmental, forests and wildlife clearance', integrating wildlife clearance with forest and environment.

On Wednesday, the ministry sent a circular to all the state forest secretaries and chief wildlife wardens asking them to tell user agencies to submit their project proposals online. "The portal would also facilitate monitoring of proposals by user agencies for seeking wildlife clearance along with other two clearances," a senior forest official told TOI.

Union environment minister Prakash Javadekar had told media during his visit to Nagpur on July 21 last that a single window clearance system for projects would be started. After eight months the facility is in place.

The user agency has to register with the portal before submitting any proposal for seeking prior approval of the Central government. The applicant registering with portal will be sent user ID and password through which it can track the status of the proposal after submitting it online.

"If user agencies require both forests and wildlife clearances,

then, first, they have to submit application for seeking forest clearance (FC). After submitting FC application, they can submit wildlife application," the official said.

After receiving the proposal online, nodal officer can examine it and forward to the divisions affected by the diversion of forest land. If proposal is not complete, nodal officer can raise query and may ask agencies to submit complete proposal.

Former member of standing committee of National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) Kishor Rithe welcomed the move. "As a member then, we had pushed for single window clearance and also did the ground work. It will certainly expedite project clearances though site inspections take time. But with committees dominated by BJP activists it will hardly matter," Rithe said.

Earlier, getting clearances took months as many projects had to go through three clearances — environment, forest and wildlife. Considering the meetings of environment appraisal committee (EAC), forest advisory committee (FAC) and National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) held after long gaps, projects used to linger. Now all the clearances will go hand-in-hand.

Forest officials said it will provide transparency and efficiency in working environment, minimize the processing delay and help in timely disposal of important issues. It will be a paperless regime.

How it was?

* Earlier: Projects wanting environment, forest and wildlife learances used to go to EAC, FAC and Standing Committee of NBWL. These committees used to meet once in three months. First projects proponents had to take EC then FAC clearance before finally going to the NBWL. In case of queries, the proposals used to be sent back for compliances, stretching the process to years.

* Now: User agency (applicants) can click on register tab available on main page of the portal (efclearance.nic.in). A registration form will be displayed on the screen. When applicant submits registration form, he will be given user ID (e-mail) and password. All the proposal information will be available on single window. He will know about all the clearances at a time. The proposals will be cleared in a few months.

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Wetlands of Madhavaram going dry

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 12 Maret 2015 | 22.34

Once fragile and beautiful, the diminishing freshwater habitat of Madhavaram poses a threat to the groundwater needs of the city while raising the risk of monsoon flooding.

Biodiversity in and around Retteri Lake (also known as Madhavaram Tank) is fast depleting, thanks to hundreds of industrial units and shops that have come up in the area. Effluents from these establishments and unregulated dumping of garbage have taken a heavy toll on the lake.

The population of Madhavaram has almost doubled since the area was brought under Corporation of Chennai limits in 2011, alongside the proliferation of industrial units that let sewage directly into Retteri Lake and other water bodies in the vicinity .

At the canal near Vadaperumbakkam, locals point to a network of pipes that carry sewage from surrounding restaurants and shops into the lake. "With a lot of construction activity through the year, debris is dumped with no fear," said S Murugavel, a resident.

The wetlands of Madhavaram are among the city's three most fertile and bio-diverse spots; the others are around Ambattur and Korattur lakes nearby . The freshwater habitat is home to exotic plant and bird species including the common kingfisher, pied kingfisher, myna, great heron, purple heron, spotted dove and spot-billed pelican.

"Retteri Lake has been divided in two by the construction of a national highway that runs through the lake," Jayshree Vencatesan of Care Earth said. "Such constructions have hurt the ecosystem by blocking waterways like canals, ponds and culverts."

Blocked waterways have clogged inlets and outlets, leading to flooding during monsoon. The wetlands should act as a sponge when it rains, absorbing and filtering water and recharging the city's groundwater but unplanned construction has made a mess of the ecosystem, causing an imbalance in the habitat, Vencatesan says.

"Think of Retteri Lake as a tank that supplies water to the southern parts of the city," Arun Krishnamoorthy of Environmental Foundation of India said. "If the tank water is polluted with heavy metals and toxins by dumping of sewage and garbage, the localities that depend on it are bound to be affected too." The ecosystem has depleted steadily over the years. Many rare species of flora and fauna have disappeared from Madhavaram forever, Arun says. "The government must take immediate action to relocate encroachers and punish those who pollute water bodies," he said. "The authorities must construct bunds to cordon off the lake and protect it from human interference. They should ban human activity such as bathing and washing along the lake periphery ."

Another pollutant is chicken waste dumped by butchers on the roadside, particularly along the periphery of Retteri Lake. Antibiotic residue in hormone-injected chickens spreads through water and soil and ends up in crops, making humans vulnerable to a range of serious infections, doctors say. The diminishing water level of Retteri Lake, also called Madhavaram Tank, poses a threat to the city's groundwater needs.

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