'Community monitoring of environment necessary'

There is increasing concern that rivers are getting more polluted despite
the efforts of the government. Gopal Krishna, Delhi-based coordinator of
Water Watch Alliance, an international network on water-related issues,
spoke to Reshma Bharti about policies that are necessary to save our rivers:

Why have efforts to reduce pollution in rivers failed?

Issues of water quality, water quantity and land use are interlinked. One
can't deal with them as if they are separate from the river basin. There is
no alternative to genuine river basin approach. Some aspects like the
weaknesses of our laws and the limitations of our sewage plants have
already received some recognition. What is not so well recognised is that
the existing patterns of industrialisation (including increasingly
industrialised agriculture) and urbanisation will invariably pollute
rivers. So there have to be more broad-based policy changes or policy
reversal before we can succeed in reducing river pollution.
The balance of power between those responsible for causing pollution and
the communities, particularly riverside communities, who can make a real
contribution to reduce pollution has to shift. The existing system favours
polluters, not those who want to resist and fight pollution. Communities
that are willing to be involved in monitoring and reducing pollution should
be strengthened so that they feel empowered to resist pollution and
polluters. Emphasis should be on 'community monitoring of environment'.

Many people consider rivers sacred. So, is mass mobilisation of people
against pollution of rivers possible?

There have been a few examples. For example, in Punjab, Baba Seechewal was
able to mobilise people and save a sacred water source from pollution. It
is interesting that he challenged those who opposed him to show any law
which gives polluters the permission to pollute water bodies! However, the
argument about sacred rivers should be broad-based. We can't concentrate on
just one or two rivers like Ganga.

What are the policy changes needed to protect rivers?

Saving our rivers has to be an integral component of policies, programmes
and projects. In the light of the adverse consequences of ongoing
amputation of rivers from their basins, there is a compelling logic to
reverse current policies. They need to be based on natural resource
accounting to ensure inter-generation equity.
We should no longer live under the illusion that pollution can grow to any
level and we'll build treatment plants to save our rivers. The complex of
policies which decide how much water will remain in rivers, how many
hazardous chemicals are being released, what will be the increase in sewage
and industrial pollution are very important and all these issues have to be
addressed through radical structural changes in the governance of our
natural resources.

https://m.timesofindia.com/interviews/community-monitoring-of-environment-
necessary/articleshow/4618487.cms

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web, visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/greenyouth/CAPpKBboJW%3Dd2VwUbUQVJqtSCm6HoD%2Bf9eZgPDtbZdB1kGTA-fw%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to