Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Environment

This definitely isn’t a cry of a die-hard environmentalist. I am not going to point out to the alarming number of mature trees being felled year after year, thereby exposing Mother Earth in the most sorry state. It’s just another day called as the Environment Day celebrated (supposedly, though I doubt people are aware that 5th of June every year is coined thus) globally to create awareness about the environment; that reminded me of my environment. The lush greenery of your plush residential complex situated in an uptown area of the suburb is not the only thing that qualifies as environment. It’s surprising to see how the builder’s get away by instituting townships by clearing huge acres of forest land and compensating for the green cover by planting a few shrubs in the boulevard. Who really cares about the wild life that loses its habitat? Is there a need to wonder when one finds a cheetah in the middle of a highway or a snake crawling in your bathroom? Of course the cheetah isn’t directing the traffic! Where are these poor creatures supposed to go and dwell when their living places are wiped away mercilessly? Scores of environmentalists have expressed concern about the depleting green cover, the declining number of endangered species and they fear extinction of many of them very soon. Village Forest Committees are working with the Joint Forest Management agency to restore millions of hectares of the degraded forests. But our efforts are being out-paced by the rate of destruction of the environment. Our honorable environment Minister finds it unrealistic to get 33% of the country’s area under the green cover. Planting 2 crore saplings (government target) in a year and then further strengthening the Politico-Builder’s nexus can never really be a solution to our green problems (or green becoming grey problems)!
The problem with our country is that green means different to different people and हरी पत्ती still has an over-powering colour-based influence on the Indian mindset. People still fail to realize the true meaning of being in the civil society environment. It’s a lot beyond the trees and saplings; it extends to your behaviour and civic sense. If you don’t throw your bus ticket when you get off the bus, you are contributing to the environment by not littering. If you are using the public transport in the first place instead of your personal car, you are firstly doing more good to the road blocks and then to reducing green house gas emissions too! If you avoid getting printed slips of your ATM transactions and you work towards going the e-way, then you are preventing the cutting of trees by saving paper. If you switch off the lights and fans when not in use, you are conserving energy. If you redress a broken tap with urgency, you are valuing the resource of water. If you are not smoking in public, you are able love your lungs and be concerned about the air the others breathe too!
It’s fairly easy to love your environment. India is a beautiful country, landscaped very scenically and crafted with care. It deserves to be valued and nurtured and not be left in a state of neglect. Don’t dirty the beaches, don’t the paint the walls of ancient monuments in the colours of your jilted love, don’t spit on the road (it makes you look more detestable than anything else) If you can’t go on hunger strikes when government claims huge acres of land in the name of development, you need to realize that you can contribute by doing a few things right. It goes to the grass root you see, where every small step counts!

4 comments:

Prasad Vaidya said...

Very good and relevant article. Liked the small suggestions therein.
There is a point I would like to highlight:
In the region of Nainital and Kumaon, the pine trees are to be found everywhere. In fact, many of us go expecting to see those Christmas Trees and are quite proud of such heritage too! But the truth is that these pine trees are a bane to the forests of the region. They lack many of the advantages of the trees that it replaced in the British Raj.
The point that I am trying to make is that even when re-afforestation is assured by a developing party, the quality of the same has to be verified beforehand.

vipul said...

The use of public transport is a good option....plus the Government should implement certain policies to increase the use of Hybrid Vehicles..for eg in the United States people who use PHEVs or HEVs get tax benefits !!!

sujay said...

Well said Priya....
& I am pretty amature in front of you highly knowledgeable intellectuals...... but try to turn off the AC and sleep durning summer...

Ok on further broader level ask Finance minister not Environment minister why he can't maintain 33% of green cover...the answer lies in so called growth terminology we all are chasing 'GDP'. Go ahead try and say that we will give preference to environment over GDP. You can't and that is the drawback of mankind. We are so used to chase without noticing what we have & had.

All of your suggestions are good to to make a 'civic society' and cleaner surroundings around us but they are useless from enviroment point of view. To protect environment we need whole different philosophy.
*Pardon me for my English I m not so good at it*

priya amrute said...

@Sujay:u got me wrong...switching off the A/c can’t really be a solution…if that be so, we need to convert offices and schools/colleges having A/c classrooms and corridors to fans. When we are talking about comfort, we are paying for it, and paying heavily in every sense…and it’s therefore fair to use it…
On the other hand, I think the environment minister also owes us an explanation because a Lavassa gets a clearance faster than an airport or a Jaitapur. Chasing GDPs is definitely not equal to building luxury townships. U probably are right in pointing out that my suggestions will help make way for cleaner surroundings, but that’s what environment means to me…the space where I live and breathe, and if I can’t take the cabinet steps; I won’t refrain from taking the small steps I preach of.
Thanks for ur comment!Probably, the first one u put :)
@Vipul & P: Valuable inputs, thanks!