This was announced with great
élan and machismo in a public meeting recently -- The ministry of environment and forests
will take charge of the controversial pollution inventory study that is being carried out
in five cities and billed to four oil companies. The top brass in the ministry are still
not willing to confirm this as their final decision. More meetings are planned to help
them make up their mind.
The nature of the shift in the loci of power is still not clear.
Official grapevine has it that retracting from the professed intention now may only add to
the embarrassment already caused by the oil industrys entry into such a sacred
precinct of air quality management.
What might have ignited this after-thought over this study? Is
this to stave off criticism of the inability of our air quality regulators and scientists
to generate credible data, and assess and manage the air pollution problem? Or is it a
reaction against the scalding public criticism of what seemed like an abdication of the
regulators right to assess air pollution problem to the oil industry?
This particular pollution inventory study has high stakes. As far
as the government is concerned, the results of this study will be the basis of the final
decision on the deadline for enforcing Euro IV standards in the country. The government so
far has rejected the proposal of the Auto Fuel Policy committee of enforcing Euro IV even
in 2010 (see link, below). The involvement of the refineries in the study therefore fanned
considerable suspicion, given their resistance to the rapid clean up of fuels.
If the government takes control, can we hope for a more unbiased
and non-partisan approach to this study and decisions thereafter? Or hope for a more
mature, science-based air quality management in the country? But what seemed like a very
good idea suddenly troubled! Homing in on the regulators concerns and discussions of
late confirmed that the environment bureaucracy at the centre is more concerned about
losing control to the Judiciary than to the oil industry. On the face of it yet another
good sign -- that after being driven by the Judiciary for over a decade now, the
government finally wants to govern!
Yet why are we concerned? There is simmering tension -- air
pollution scientists are getting reproachful of the action plans of the seven cities
taking shape under the aegis of the Supreme Court to control particulate pollution. They
have started complaining that these action plans lack balance due to excessive stress on
vehicular pollution control -- downplaying the potential of other probable city-specific
local sources. So we heard a strong plea for an integrated, multi-pronged approach for
controlling air pollution. This murmur of discontent had a sharp ring recently at a
meeting held jointly by the World Bank and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) on
the occasion of the release of the latest study of the Bank on air quality trend analysis
in five cities of India.
This plea from our regulators to embrace an integrated framework
to address the problems crowding their agenda and competing for resources and attention
impressed but did not convince. Why? CPCB has taken the lead in issuing guidelines to 16
polluted cities listed in two court orders April 5, 2002 and August 14, 2003, for
preparing action plans. It has even laid stress on such progressive steps as setting air
quality targets, improving air quality monitoring programmes, developing inventories of
pollution sources, and charting a roadmap for controlling air pollution.
Yet in this seemingly balanced approach, the guidelines made it
conditional that automobile pollution control measures to be included in the action plan,
"may necessarily align to the auto fuel policy recommendations and directions."
The diehard industry folklore persists -- that the transport sector does not merit
measures more aggressive than the auto fuel policy roadmap. There are other, bigger,
contributors to particulate pollution! Once again signalling the status quo in the
transport sector and expecting science to provide the rationale for it
instead of making other polluting sectors catch up fast.
Targeted action against vehicles is criticised in the name of
comprehensiveness. Regulators are not disturbed by the evidence that vehicles already
contribute more than 40 per cent of PM10, or the fact that diesel and petrol fuels
together spew as much as a quarter to more than two-thirds of the PM2.5 in some cities.
They also choose to ignore the fact that despite poor data, all the seven state
governments that have submitted action plans to the court have covered all sectors
transport, industry, power plants and other sources. They have even provided plans for
inventory and health studies. But all of them have indicated vehicles as among the most
serious and rapidly growing sources of pollution.
Clearly, the problem lies elsewhere. Despite administering the
most powerful environment laws in the country, the environment bureaucracy has failed to
assess and control industrial and other sources of pollution. It has not been able to
ensure the enforcement of air quality standards, accountability and compliance. This
demands urgent intervention to enable science-based AQM. But using this argument to insist
on maintaining the status quo in the mobile source sector truly defies reason.
For over a decade now, the judicial process has shown that it is
possible to act based on the existing information in all sectors, in spite of on-going
efforts to improve management capacities. To overcome the dismally poor state of air
quality management in cities, the committee advising the court on air pollution matters
has stated in its report of January 2004, "Though air quality planning is nascent in
India and pollution source inventory inadequate, the precedence set by the Supreme Court
in Delhi demonstrates that action can be started immediately. Priority actions can be
drawn up based on science and evidence of harmful effects of air pollution and lessons
from global good practices."
Our air quality regulators have not yet grasped the policy
relevance of the existing scientific information. Not yet learn the skill of using diverse
scientific information for decision-making, especially when their data is so chronically
poor. Quantitative estimates are not supported with risk analysis to understand the health
benefits of regulations. They are hoping that the results of the inventory studies will
shift the problem, rather than solve it.
Surely, if emission inventories are the foundation upon which
strategies are based and prioritised, building the skills of regulators to undertake such
studies is critical. But a bigger challenge lies in communicating air pollution science,
risk analysis and complexities to guide policy decisions. Regulatory agencies in India
rarely organise their own research and are more dependent on external agencies for
scientific information. But they also do not have capacities for rigorous internal
scientific review to safeguard against biases that may even overwhelm science.
We are tired of pseudo-scientific arguments. If our scientists are
still too inept to generate good data, and want to dawdle till more studies are conducted
to be able to act -- let them. But then stop everything else stop registering
vehicles, bar new licenses to industry. Freeze growth!
See
also>>
-- Anumita Roychowdhury
Right To Clean Air Campaign