It is often said that Delhi is one of the most
polluted cities in the world. And by implication, people tend to believe that it is the
most polluted city in India. But this is not true. While it is indeed one of the most
polluted cities in the world the World Health Organisation monitors the air quality
in about 20 cities of the world and Delhi indeed figures high on that list Delhi is
not one of the most polluted cities in India, according to the data collected by the
Central Pollution Control Board. In 1997, the annual average concentration of total
suspended particulate matter in Delhi was 339.3 microgrammes per cubic metre (ug/cum)
in other words, Delhis air was critically polluted round the year. But Surat,
Patna, Jharia, Faridabad, Kanpur, Agra and Ankleshwar had still higher levels of
particulate pollution than Delhi round the year ranging from 384 ug/cum to 412
ug/cum. We find the same situation when we compare
pollution on the worst day of the year. In Delhi, the peak pollution reached 1,055 ug/cum
in 1997. In other words, on that particular day, Delhis pollution was nothing short
of disastrous. But Kochi reached an astonishing 2,506 ug/cum on the most polluted day,
Lucknow 2,339 ug/cum, Kanpur 1,385 ug/cum, Chandigarh 1,254 ug/cum, Alwar 1,237 ug/cum,
Patna 1,229, Agra 1,222 ug/cum and Ankleshwar 1,198 ug/cum. Udaipur and Mumbai were close
behind Delhi with peak concentrations of 1,025 ug/cum and 1,019 ug/cum, respectively.
In short, the picture of air pollution is nothing short of
horrendous. Moreover, this pollution is widespread and growing. And this is the picture
when the quality of pollution monitoring is extremely poor.
Firstly, there are cities like Varanasi and Srinagar whose
air quality is not even monitored. Not only is pollution in Srinagar high, there are
reports that is getting high even in Agartala, to name just a few such towns.
Secondly, even in cities where air quality is monitored,
the number of monitoring stations is very small. Delhi today has only about ten pollution
monitoring stations whereas it should have some 60-100 stations. The average of a such a
large number of stations could be much higher than what is given today.
Thirdly, a large number of critical pollutants are not even
being monitored. What pollution control boards monitor in the name of suspended
particulates is Total Suspended Particulate Matter which hardly any industrialised country
in the world monitors today. This is because particles which are bigger than 10 microns
that is, one-millionth of a metre -- in diameter do not penetrate the respiratory
system much. Over a decade ago most industrialised countries had switched to measuring
only PM10 that is, particles of or less than 10 microns. There is only one station
in India in Delhi where PM10 monitoring began in 1998. India is way behind
and will be so even in the future. Now most advanced countries are moving to measuring
PM2.5 because particles of this size are far worse than PM 10. Because of the
preponderance of 2-stroke scooters on Indias roads, another major pollutant in
Indias urban air is benzene a potent cancer-causing agent like particles.
This too is not monitored in India.
Tthe limited monitoring that has been done in Delhi shows
extraordinary results. PM10 levels in Delhi reached an astonishing 820 ug/cum 8
times above the specified standard and possibly way beyond anything recorded in any other
city in the world. PM10 levels were far worse than the levels of Total Suspended
Particulate Matter in Delhi when the two were compared with their specific standards. The
few studies done on benzene levels in Delhi show that this cancer-causing pollutant
reaches even more disastrous levels well over 100 times the standard. (CHECK)
And what is incredible is that neither the Central
government nor any of the state governments have as of yet cared to formulate a plan to
control this pollution and bring it to acceptable levels. Everyone is literally sleeping.
If anything is happening piecemeal or whatever it is because of the Supreme
Court or the High Courts. The governments record is nothing short of being
pathetic.
So what are we to do with this
pollution?
Power plants, industries and vehicles are the biggest sources
of pollution. The rate with which vehicular pollution is growing is absolutely
astonishing. The Centre for Science and Environment has found that between 1975 and 1995
a period during which the countrys economy (Gross Domestic Product or GDP)
grew by about 2.5 times the total amount of pollutants emitted by vehicles grew by
8 times. And since India is just in the nascent stages of industrialisation, power
generation, motorisation and urbanisation, we can be certain that pollution will grow by
leaps and bounds unless major efforts are made to control it. That is, unless we very
carefully take an environment-friendly path for industrialisation, power generation,
motorisation and urbanisation.
The question, therefore, is: Will we? It is always hard to
predict the future but if we look at past trends the simple answer is: Not for a very long
time. Let us see what world history teaches us. Pollution grew very rapidly in the Western
countries soon after the economic boom that followed the Second World War a period
during which the West created enormous economic wealth. By the late 1950s, the air and
water was extremely polluted. The Thames and the Rhine had become sewers. Japan was
suffering from an unknown but horrifying neurological disorder called the Minamata
Disease. It was impossible to breathe in Tokyo, London or Los Angeles. This led to a
powerful environmental movement in the 1960s and which gained force during the 1970s.
With environment also becoming an electoral issue,
governments began to respond. During the 1970s and 1980s, Western governments did two
things. Firstly, they enacted strong laws and enforced them with great discipline and,
thus, secondly ensured a substantial amount of industrial investment in pollution control.
As a result of all these efforts, by the mid-1980s the Thames was once again beginning to
breathe and so were the waters of the Stockholm archipelago. And urban air was also
reasonably clean. It thus took nearly 20 years or one generation from the mid-1960s
to the mid-1980s to bring about the change. And the battle is still far from won.
Western industries still produce enormous toxic wastes, carbon dioxide emitted by their
power plants, industries and vehicles is threatening to destabilise the worlds
climate, and both Japan and the EU are suddenly finding huge quantities of dioxin
one of the most poisonous substance known -- in their environment
In India, we are at the same situation that the West was in
the 1960s. The question is: Will we be able to replicate what the West did in one
generation? Will Indias rivers and cities begin to breathe by the 2020s? The answer
is: Very Unlikely. For three key reasons which markedly differentiate us from the
West.
*One, pollution control has yet to become an electoral
issue in India. Indias politicians have just not shown any serious interest in
controlling pollution. They have no courage to take on the big polluters the
corporate sector, which too has shown a singular lack of interest in controlling
pollution. The governments own companies and power stations are heavy polluters. And
politicians do not want to take on the small polluters either the small-scale units
or the small taxiwallahs / three-wheelerwallahs because they constitute
important vote banks. Therefore, Indias electoral democracy is proving to be very
weak to confront the scourge of pollution. As a result, Indias pollution control
laws are not even worth the piece of paper on which they have been promulgated. And it
is unlikely that this situation will change in any real sense in the near future.
*Two, pollution control requires enormous discipline and
effective regulation. Given the state of political and bureaucratic corruption, again it
is extremely unlikely that pollution control laws will be enforced with any level of
effectiveness.
*Three, pollution control will require heavy investment and
given the fact that Indias per capita income even today is far less than what the
Western countries had achieved in the 1950s, it is hard to see this investment being made.
Unless, of course, the government carefully searches for cost-effective measures. Takes
the usually cheaper precautionary measures than the extremely expensive curative measures.
And insists that the companies big or small have to meet certain minimum
standards or face severe penalties. But neither do our politicians nor do our bureaucrats
have any idea of how to do this the pollution control bureaucracy is today one of
the most pathetically incompetent bureaucracies in the country -- and nor does the
government want to do anything the polluter-politician-bureaucrat nexus being
extremely strong.
What then does this mean? It simply means that India
will not be able to clean up its pollution in one generation. If it takes at least 2
generations, we will begin to see cleaner air only by the 2040s. In other words, the
current urban generation is going to leave behind a totally unlivable habitat for at least
two of its succeeding generations. The future is, therefore, nothing less than
frightening.
One may ask how can generations pass by without any effective
action being taken. That this can happen in the future is clearly shown by the past.
It was in 1981 that the Air Pollution Control Act was legislated. Nearly 20 years, that
is, one generation has already gone by without the Central or any of the state governments
having even developed an effective action plan which clearly aims to bring down pollution
to levels that will give us clean air. Both the Central and state governments have only
promoted cosmetic exercises like checking the backsides of private motor cars or scooters
a technique that only puts the blame on the victim. Even Andhra Pradeshs
chief minister Chandrababu Naidu, otherwise a very savvy politician, had his picture
proudly taken while checking the backside of a car.
What does this pollution mean in terms of economic growth?
Will Indias economy be affected by this pollution? The unfortunate answer is: No.
Politicians and industrialists do not have to learn any
real lesson. Things can go on as usual without any of these groups suffering. As classical
economic texts point out, pollution will even help the economy to grow. Bottling water
industry will grow by leaps and bounds. So will hospitals and medicine producers and
vendors. Yes, certain costs will definitely go up. Drinking water costs, for example. The
rich are already paying for bottled drinking water as much as they pay for milk. But, to
meet the needs of the poor, the government will have to invest heavily to treat the
polluted waters to turn them into drinking water quality and if, however, the
government fails to do so because of lack of money or political will, as it is already
doing so then it is the poor who will have to pay the biggest price the
price being their very lives.
Air pollution will be the biggest leveller because it will
affect both the rich and the poor. But the rich will be able to afford the cost of dealing
with chronic asthma and cancer whereas the poor will not be able to do so. In other words,
Indias wealth will be built on the backs of its poor, its elderly, its children and
those genetically susceptible. Not on the back of the economy but on the back of public
health.
What does this mean in terms of numbers? How many will die?
Today, about a million die each year because of water pollution and this is still
largely because of the traditional form of pollution which results from human filth. The
new water pollution will add to this all kind of horrendous diseases like cancers and
neurological disorders. It is estimated that at least one lakh die each year from urban
air pollution. Thus, at the least one million or more will continue to die from pollution
each year in India. This figure will rise to probably 2-3 million a year with growing
pollution. But tens of millions will suffer from high rates of illness and a very poor
quality of life.
If we were to take one generation to control pollution,
we would have killed off at least 20-30 million people, mostly poor people. And if we were
to take two generations, the numbers could rise to 40-60 million people.
The problem is that these numbers are so small that for
Indias politicians and industrialists they mean absolutely nothing. What do 50
million deaths or murders mean in a country which is already 1,000 billion
and likely to grow to 1,500 billion soon? Economic growth will come at a high price only
for those who suffer from the pollution. The sad fact is that the dead and the diseased
have never protested before and neither do the living poor because they have to give
priority to their today. Probably 50 million poor people have already been killed off in
the last 50 years of Independence because of the inaction on the part of our political
system to deal with Indias poverty. Indias independence has definitely come to
us at a high cost but it has made no material difference to the politicians of the
country.
Surely all this is deeply immoral.
But who is going to protest against this immorality?
That is where, in fact, the answer lies. If anything is going
to change, it will not come from the electoral part of Indias democracy. It will
come from those elements of Indian democracy which give its people certain rights
the Right to Free Speech, the Right to form Associations, and the Right to Protest,
especially the Right to go to Court. In other words, exactly as in the West, it is
Indias civil society which will have to literally browbeat the countrys
elected representatives into action. In fact, the fight against pollution will only
succeed only if it becomes a peoples movement an urban peoples movement
which can count on an active group against pollution in every town and city of India
working together as one force.
But this will not be an easy task. People will be given all
kinds of confusing information. By the government most of all and by the industry as well.
Critical information will be held back by government officials and scientists. There will
be few scientists ready to speak out. Despite the high levels of particulates in India's
urban air, the Centre for Science and Environment has not been able to find one single
scientist in the country who has studied the health effects of this pollutant. In such a
situation, every attempt will be made to divert attention to inconsequential issues. And,
to boot, fighting pollution is an intensely scientific task. Unless the civil society
itself acquires scientific expertise or finds willing scientists to work with it, and then
finds willing judges to tame the politicians and the bureaucrats, getting the balance
between environment and development will prove to be a highly elusive task.
I am convinced that it is not going to be an India that
anyone of us dreamed of. Poor. Polluted. And politically sick. Welcome to the 21st
century !
Note: If any reader feels strongly about the problem of
pollution and wants to do something about it in his own home town, please write to the
author of the article at the following address:
Centre for Science and Environment,
41 Tughlaqabad Institutional Area,
New Delhi-110062. (E-mail: webadmin@cseindia.org) |