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Environment Management Concept

Definition

    Its an attempt to control human impact on and interaction with the environment in order to
     preserve natural resources

    Environmental management focuses on the improvement of human welfare for present and
     future generations.

    Administrative functions that develop, implement, and monitor the environmental policy of an
     organization.

Sustainable Development

    is a pattern of resource use, that aims to meet human needs while preserving the environment
     so that these needs can be met not only in the present, but also for generations to come.

    The development initiatives be initiated in such a way that the future generations can enjoy the
     benefits of Nature without any compromise.

    Using the resources to the extent to which it is sustained.

    Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without
     compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
Significance in India

     WHY factor

               India is the world's sixth largest and second fastest growing producer of greenhouse
                gases.

               Delhi , Mumbai and Chennai are three of the world's ten most polluted cities.



               Two-thirds of city dwellers lack sewerage; one-third lack potable water.

               India urban population grows equivalent of another New York City every year. This
                equals to a projected urban population of over 500 million in 20 years.

Trends in Environmental Management

     Impact Assessment and Planning (IAP)

Assessing environmental and social impacts prior to setting up operations and obtaining environmental
approval from the authorities is almost mandatory in most project categories. IAP assessments may be
required not only for newly constructed facilities, but also for new operations that will be housed in an
existing building.

     Environmental Liability and Clean-up

Foreign investment has resulted in heightened scrutiny of current and historic environmental liabilities
associated with property transactions in India.

     Sustainability and Regulatory Compliance

The increasing desire of Indian companies to meet world class standards has caused established
companies in India to take on sustainability initiatives as a means of improving their global brand and
reputation.

     Climate Change

While India still lags the West in coming up with concrete regulations based on the development versus
environment debate, there is an increasing awareness in India that climate change is not about scoring
points but about the existence of entire communities inside and outside of India.

National Environmental Policy

     The National Environment Policy seeks to extend the coverage, and fill in gaps that still exist, in
      light of present knowledge and accumulated experience.

     It does not displace, but builds on the earlier policies.
   National Forest Policy, 1988

               National Conservation Strategy and Policy Statement on Environment and Development,
                1992

               Policy Statement on Abatement of Pollution,1992

     The National Environment Policy is intended to mainstream environmental concerns in all
      development activities.

Objectives of the National Environment Policy

     Conservation of Critical Environmental Resources

To protect and conserve critical ecological systems and resources, and invaluable natural and man-made
heritage, which are essential for life support, livelihoods, economic growth, and a broad conception of
human well-being.

     Intra-generational Equity: Livelihood Security for the Poor

To ensure equitable access to environmental resources and quality for all sections of society, and in
particular, to ensure that poor communities, which are most dependent on environmental resources for
their livelihoods, are assured secure access to these resources.

     Environmental Governance

To apply the principles of good governance (transparency, rationality, accountability, reduction in time
and costs, participation, and regulatory independence) to the management and regulation of use of
environmental resources.

     Enhancement of Resources for Environmental Conservation

To ensure higher resource flows, comprising finance, technology, management skills, traditional
knowledge, and social capital, for environmental conservation through mutually beneficial
multistakeholder partnerships between local communities, public agencies, the academic and research
community, investors, and multilateral and bilateral development partners.

Multilateral Development Banks are institutions that provide financial support and professional advice
for economic and social development activities in developing countries. The term Multilateral
Development Banks (MDBs) typically refers to the World Bank Group and four Regional Development
Banks:
The African Development Bank
The Asian Development Bank
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
The Inter-American Development Bank Group
Principles National Environment Policy

     Human Beings are at the Centre of Sustainable Development Concerns

     The Right to Development

The right to development must be fulfilled so as to equitably meet developmental and environmental
needs of present and future generations.

     Environmental Protection is an Integral part of the Development Process

     The Precautionary Approach

Where there are credible threats of serious or irreversible damage to key environmental resources, lack
of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent
environmental degradation.

     Economic Efficiency

The services of environmental resources be given economic value, and such value to count equally with
the economic values of other goods and services, in analysis of alternative courses of action.

Example: Polluter Pays

     Entities with “Incomparable” Values

Significant risks to human health, life, and environmental life-support systems, besides certain other
unique natural and man-made entities, which may impact the well-being, broadly conceived, of large
numbers of persons, may be considered as ”Incomparable” in that individuals or societies would not
accept these risks for compensation in money or conventional goods and services.

     Equity

The cardinal principle of equity or justice requires that human beings cannot be treated differently
based on irrelevant differences between them.

     Legal Liability

The principle of legal liability may be viewed as an embodiment in legal doctrine of the “polluter pays
approach.

                Fault Based Liability

        In a fault based liability regime a party is held   liable   if it breaches a preexisting legal duty,
for example, an environmental standard.
   Strict Liability

         Strict liability imposes an obligation to compensate the victim for harm resulting from actions or
failure to take action, which may not necessarily constitute a breach of any law or duty of care.

     Public Trust Doctrine

The State is not an absolute owner, but a trustee of all natural resources, which are by nature meant for
public use and enjoyment, subject to reasonable conditions, necessary to protect the legitimate interest
of a large number of people, or for matters of strategic national interest.

     Decentralization

Decentralization involves ceding or transfer of power from a Central Authority to State and Local
Authorities, in order to empower public authorities having jurisdiction at the spatial level at which
particular environmental issues are salient, to address these issues.

     Integration

Integration refers to the inclusion of environmental considerations in sectoral policymaking, the
integration of the social and natural sciences in environment related policy research, and the
strengthening of relevant linkages among various agencies at the Central, State, and Local Self-
Government levels, charged with the implementation of environmental policies.

     Environmental Standard Setting

Environmental standards must reflect the economic and social development situation in which they
apply. Standards adopted in one society or context may have unacceptable economic and social costs if
applied without discrimination in another society or context.

     Preventive Action

It is preferable to prevent environmental damage from occurring in the first place, rather than
attempting to restore degraded environmental resources after the fact.

     Environmental Offsetting

There is a general obligation to protect threatened or endangered species and natural systems that are
of special importance to sustaining life, providing livelihoods, or general well-being.
Regulatory Reforms

     Revisiting the Policy and Legislative

Framework

     Process Related Reforms

     Substantive Reforms

Process Related Reforms

     Approach

The objective is to reduce delays and levels of decision-making, realize decentralization of
environmental functions, and ensure greater transparency and Accountability.

     Framework for Legal Action

A judicious mix of civil and criminal processes and sanctions will be employed in the legal regime for
enforcement, through a review of the existing legislation.

Substantive Reforms

     Environment and Forests Clearances

Under the new arrangements, there would be significant devolution of powers to the State/UT level.

     Coastal Areas

     Living Modified Organisms (LMOs)

     Environmentally Sensitive Zones

     Monitoring of Compliance

     Use of Economic Principles in Environmental Decision-making

LMOs

In order to ensure that development of biotechnology does not lead to unforeseen adverse impacts, the
following actions will be taken:

               Review the regulatory processes for LMOs so that all relevant scientific knowledge is
                taken into account, and ecological, health, and economic concerns are adequately
                addressed.

               Periodically review the National Bio-safety Guidelines, and Bio-safety Operations
                Manual to ensure that these are based on current scientific knowledge.
   Ensure the conservation of bio-diversity and human health when dealing with LMOs

Environmentally Sensitive Zones

The following actions will be taken:

     Identify and give legal status to Environmentally Sensitive Zones in the country having
      environmental entities with “Incomparable values” requiring special conservation efforts.

     Formulate area development plans for these zones on a scientific basis, with adequate
      participation by the local communities.

     Create local institutions with adequate participation for the environmental management of such
      areas, to ensure adherence to the approved area development plans, which should be prepared
      in consultation with the local communities.

Monitoring of Compliance

The following actions will be taken:

     Take measures, including capacity development initiatives to enable Panchayati Raj Institutions
      and urban local bodies to undertake monitoring of compliance with environmental management
      plans. Measures will also be taken to encourage municipalities to annually report their
      environmental performance to their governing bodies.

     Develop feasible models of public-private partnerships to leverage financial, technical, and
      management resources of the private sector in setting up and operating infrastructure for
      monitoring of environmental compliance, with ironclad safeguards against possible conflict of
      interest or collusion with the monitored entities.

     Use of Economic Principles in Environmental Decision-making:

It is necessary that the costs associated with the degradation and depletion of natural resources be
incorporated into the decisions of economic actors at various levels, to reverse the tendency to treat
these resources as “free goods” and to pass the costs of degradation to other sections of society, or to
future generations of the country.

Environment

The term environment refers to an organization’s natural and human surroundings. An organization’s
environment extends from within the organization itself to the global system, and includes air, water,
land, flora, fauna, as well as human beings.

Current Condition in India

     Rapid growing Population
 Economic Development

               Uncontrolled Growth of Urbanization

               Industrialization/ Globalisation

               Expansion and Massive Intensification of agriculture

               Destruction of Forests

Rapid Growth of Population
50% of population to be in Urban cities by 2020
UN projection half of world population to stay in Urban cities by 2008


Environmental Conflict

     India lags behind in putting forward any system for planned management of its fragile eco-
      system that is in constant conflict with the needs of development .

     Indian scenario is bleak, what with all round failures in arresting the population growth with
      attendant pressures on land and scarce natural resources , increasing urbanisation ,
      industrialisation , growth in rapacious consumption , wasteful life styles

     In India, relationship between westernised models of development and the preservation
      environment on the face of its fight against poverty, the conflict exists broadly on three levels:-

            o   Some castigate excessive concern for environment as a result of conspiracy of the
                developed nations against progress in the underdeveloped countries like India and
                maintain that India may address issues concerning environment only after it reaches the
                level of production and consumption of the industrialised nations.

     Some others feel that concern for environment is bound to divert attention from the problems
      of the poor. Environment, to this group has nothing to do with trying to give a better deal to the
      large and ever growing population.

     Some believe that in India at least the very large and ever-growing population is responsible for
      the environment crises.

Environmental Issues in India

     Forest and Agricultural Degradation of land

     Resource depletion (water, mineral, forest, sand, rocks etc.) is an economic term referring to
      the exhaustion of raw materials within a region.

     Environmental Degradation
 Public health

     Loss of biodiversity

     Loss of resilience in ecosystems

     Livelihood security for the poor

Forest and Agricultural Degradation of land

     Degradation means reduction of

               Forest quality - the density and structure of the trees, the ecological services supplied,
                the biomass of plants and animals, the species diversity.

               Fertility and output Quality of Agricultural Land.

Biomass is the mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time.

     Causes:

               Land clearance, such as clearcutting and deforestation.

               Agricultural depletion of soil nutrients through poor farming practices.

               Livestock including overgrazing.

               Inappropriate Irrigation and overdrafting.

               Urban sprawl and Commercial development.

               Land pollution including industrial waste.

               Vehicle off-roading.

               Quarrying of stone, sand, ore and minerals.

Overdrafting is the process of extracting groundwater beyond the safe yield or equilibrium yield of the
aquifer.
An aquifer is a wet underground layer
The Urban sprawl is the spreading of urban developments (as houses and shopping centers) on
undeveloped land near a city
A commercial clear cut is when cutters remove only the valuable trees and leave others standing.


     Effects

               Accelerated soil erosion by wind and water

               Soil acidification and the formation of acid sulfate soil resulting in barren soil.
    Soil alkalinisation owing to irrigation with water containing sodium bicarbonate leading
                to poor soil structure and reduced crop yields.

               Soil salination in irrigated land requiring soil salinity control to reclaim the land.

               Soil waterlogging in irrigated land which calls for some form of subsurface land drainage
                to remediate the negative effects.

               Destruction of soil structure including loss of organic matter.

Environmental Degradation

    is defined as any change or disturbance to the environment perceived to be deleterious or
     undesirable.

    Environmental degradation is the deterioration of the environment through

               depletion of resources such as air, water and soil

               the destruction of ecosystems

               the extinction of wildlife.

Water resources

    Usage of Ground and Underground water by the Industry - causes huge droughts and
     contamination to a massive area by exploiting an excessive amount of ground water and then
     replacing it with toxic discharge.

    85% of rural drinking water and 55% of urban water comes from underground sources has
     caused the national water table to suddenly and very dramatically drop.

    The rivers are slowly being polluted and destroyed by sewage, chemicals and other agricultural
     and industrial waste.

Deforestation

    almost 5.3 Million hectares of forest have been destroyed since the independence for housing,
     industrialisation and river projects.

    Poor management and abuse of power are again the increasingly sad cause behind the mass
     deforestation- Poaching.

    The invasion of foreign tree species such as Eucalyptus etc.

    Eucalyptus is water intensive and nutrient intensive.
Eucalyptus is toxic, due to allelopathic properties, which serve to reduce not only other plant life,
including crops, by restricting germination of other species, but is also detrimental to soil micro and
macrofauna.
macrofauna (biology), in soil science, animals that are one centimetre or more long but smaller than an
earthworm. Potworms, myriapods, centipedes, millipedes


Public Health

     Public health has often been defined as a science dealing with the determinants and defence of
      health at the population level, while clinical medicine deals with multiple maladies and their
      remedies at the level of an individual patient.

     Public health aims to understand and influence the social, cultural and economic determinants
      of health as well as to study and structure health systems as efficient channels for health
      services delivery.

Loss of Biodiversity

     Biodiversity is the distribution and number, variety and variability of living organisms over time.

     Biodiversity may be diversity within species (genetic diversity), between species (species
      diversity), and between ecosystems (ecosystem diversity).

     Biodiversity includes all ecosystems—wildlands, nature preserves or national parks, plantations,
      farms, croplands, aquaculture sites, rangelands and urban parks too have their own biodiversity.

     Loss in biodiversity has direct and indirect negative effects on Food security, Vulnerability,
      Health, Energy security, Clean water and Social relations.

     Fragmentation of habitats and the sharp decline in small subpopulations of plants and animals
      bring them on the edge of decline.

     18 domestic poultry breeds are under threat and around 40 species of plants and animals have
      extincted.

     India has lost about 40% of its mangroves and some crucial part of its wetlands.

Major problems with biodiversity conservation

     Low priority for conservation of living natural resources.

     Exploitation of living natural resources for monetary gain.

     Values and knowledge about the species and ecosystem inadequately known.

     Unplanned urbanization and uncontrolled industrialization.
Major biodiversity threats

     Habitat destruction.

     Extension of agriculture.

     Filling up of wetlands.

     Conversion of rich bio-diversity site for Human settlement and industrial development.

     Destruction of coastal areas.

     Uncontrolled commercial exploitation.

Loss of resilience in ecosystem

     Ecosystem resilience describes the capacity of an ecosystem to cope with disturbances, such as
      storms, fire and pollution, without shifting into a qualitatively different state.

     A resilient ecosystem has the capacity to withstand shocks and surprises and, if damaged, to
      rebuild itself.

     In a resilient ecosystem, the process of rebuilding after disturbance promotes renewal and
      innovation.

     Without resilience, ecosystems become vulnerable to the effects of disturbance that previously
      could be absorbed.

Livelihood security for the poor

     Poor farmers are unable to cope with adverse climatic conditions can only resort to seasonal
      migration due to lack of any productive assets or availability of alternative employment options
      in the village.

     Slowdown in agricultural growth and productivity, changing cropping patterns, increase in
      distress migration, changing consumption patterns, government policies favouring industrial
      houses, among others have seriously undermined the food and livelihood security of the poorer
      households.

Environmental issues in India

     Water pollution

     Growing water scarcity

     Air pollution

     Poor management of waste
 Falling groundwater tables

     Preservation and quality of forests

     Biodiversity loss, and land/soil degradation

Water pollution

     Discharge of untreated sewage is single most important cause for pollution of surface and
      ground water in India.

     Large gap between generation and treatment of domestic wastewater in India.

     India lacks sufficient treatment capacity.

     Sewage treatment plants that exist do not operate and are not maintained.

     Improper design or poor maintenance or lack of reliable electricity supply to operate the plants,
      together with absentee employees and poor management.

     The untreated industrial wastes have resulted in calcium, magnesium, fluoride, mercury, beta-
      endosulphan and heptachlor pesticide were more than permissible limit (MPL) in ground and tap
      waters.

     The water has high concentration of COD and BOD (chemical and biochemical oxygen demand),
      ammonia, phosphate, chloride, chromium, arsenic and chlorpyrifos pesticide in many of the
      dwellings along the industrial belt.

     The ground water also contains nickel and selenium, while the tap water has high concentration
      of lead, nickel and cadmium.

Endosulfan is an off-patent organochlorine insecticide and acaricide that is being phased out globally.
Heptachlor is an organochlorine compound that was used as an insecticide.
Acaricide: An agent, usually a chemical, that kills mites.


Water is Precious and scarce Resource

     Only a small fraction (about 3%) is fresh water

     India is the wettest country in the world, but rainfall is highly uneven with time and space (with
      extremely low in Rajasthan and high in North-East)

     On an average there are only 40 rainy days

     Out of 4000 BCM(Billion Cubic Meter) rainfall received, about 600 BCM is put to use so far.

     Water resources are over-exploited resulting in major Water Quality problems.
Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974

    Preamble: Maintaining and restoring of wholesomeness of water – level of WQ

    Provision for consent.

    Every polluter (industry or municipality) has to obtain consent from SPCBs/PCCs-State Pollution
     Control Board (SPCB) Pollution Control Committee (PCC)

    Consent is conditional.

    Standards prescribed for effluents.

    Monitoring the compliance.

Major Factors Responsible for WQ Degradation

    Domestic: 423 class I cities and 499 class II towns harboring population of 20 Crore generate
     about 26254 mld of wastewater of which only 6955 mld is treated.

    Industrial: About 57,000 polluting industries in India generate about 13,468 mld of wastewater
     out of which nearly 60% (generated from large & medium industries) is treated.

    Non-point sources also contribute significant pollution loads mainly in rainy season. Pesticides
     consumption is about 1,00,000 tonnes/year of which AP, Haryana, Punjab, TN, WB, Gujarat, UP
     and Maharashtra are principal consumers.

    Domestic sewage is the major source of pollution in India in surface water which contribute
     pathogens, the main source of water borne diseases along with depletion of oxygen in water
     bodies.

    Sewage along with agricultural run-off and industrial effluents also contributes large amount of
     nutrients in surface water causing eutrophication

    A large part of the domestic sewage is not even collected. This results in stagnation of sewage
     within city, a good breeding ground for mosquitoes and contaminate the groundwater, the only
     source of drinking water in many cities.

WATER POLLUTION CONTROL STRATEGY

    Urban sources – National River Action Plan

    Industrial Sources – through consent ( SPCB)

    Special Drives: 17 categories of industries

    Industries discharging into rivers and lakes
 24 Problem areas action plan

    Environmental auditing

    Common effluent treatment plants for cluster of SSI units (124)

    Promotion of low-waste and no-waste technology

Recent efforts to address water issues

    US$100 billion project to interlink all major river networks in India.

    Connect water-deficient areas to water-abundant ones by interlinking 37 Indian rivers.

    Transfer water through 30 links across 9,600 kilometers and the project would connect 32
     dams.

    Aims a transformation of India's water treatment, management, transmission and distribution.

Water Scarcity- Indian Scenario

    The thirst of water for India’s rapid development is growing day by day.

    Large area under the less water conditions/drought prone.

    The quality of groundwater is not good.

    Water supply of the 90% of India’s territory is served by inter-state rivers.

    Growing number of conflicts across the states on water sharing issues.

Major Reasons behind Water Scarcity

    Population growth and Food production (Agriculture)

    Increasing construction/ infrastructure development Activities

    Massive urbanization and industrialization throughout the country

    Climatic change and variability- Depleting of natural resources due to changing climate
     conditions (Deforestation etc.)

    Lack of implementation of effective water management systems.

http://youtube/XGgYTcPzexE
Air Pollution

     Vehicle emissions are responsible for 70% of the country’s air pollution.

     Air pollution from vehicle exhaust and industry is a worsening problem for India.

     Exhaust from vehicles has increased eight-fold over levels of twenty years ago; industrial
      pollution has risen four times.

     At average trip speeds between 20 to 40 kilometers per hour, the cars pollutant emission was
      twice and At average trip speeds between 5 to 20 kilometers per hour, the cars pollutant
      emissions were 4 to 8 times as much as much as when the average speed was 55 to 75
      kilometers per hour.

     Some Indian taxis and auto-rickshaws run on adulterated fuel blends.

     Some adulterants increase emissions of harmful pollutants from vehicles, worsening urban air
      pollution.

     Fuel adulteration is essentially an unintended consequence of tax policies and the attempt to
      control fuel prices, in the name of fairness.

     India’s environmental problems are exacerbated by its heavy reliance on coal for power
      generation.

     Emits a high amount of carbon and greenhouse gases.

     Harmful pollutants like nitrogen and sulphur oxides emitted by aircraft at approximately
      35,000ft combine with other gases in the atmosphere to create noxious particulate matter.

     8,000 people will die due to aircraft pollutants this year, and 3,500 of them would be from India
      and China.

     Fuelwood and biomass burning is the primary reason for near-permanent haze and smoke
      observed above rural and urban India, and in satellite pictures of the country.

     Fuelwood and biomass cakes are used for cooking and general heating in over 100 million
      Indian households, and are used two to three times a day, daily.

     World Health Organization, claim 300,000 to 400,000 people die of indoor air pollution and
      carbon monoxide poisoning in India because of biomass burning and use of chullahs.

Recent trends in India's air quality

     Most Indian cities continue to violate India's and world air quality PM10 targets. Respirable
      particulate matter pollution remains a key challenge for India.
 A decreasing trend has been observed in sulphur dioxide levels in residential areas of many
     cities such as Delhi, Mumbai, Lucknow, Bhopal during last few years. The decreasing trend in
     sulphur dioxide levels may be due to recently introduced clean fuel standards, and the
     increasing use of LPG as domestic fuel instead of coal or fuelwood, and the use of LPG instead of
     diesel in certain vehicles.

PM10 (meaning Particulate Matter 10 micrometers or less in diameter).

    Most Indian cities greatly exceed acceptable levels of suspended particulate matter. This is
     because of refuse and biomass burning, vehicles emissions, power plant emissions, industrial
     sources.

    The Indian air quality monitoring stations reported lower levels of PM10 and suspended
     particulate matter during monsoon months possibly due to wet deposition and air scrubbing by
     rainfall. Higher levels of particulates were observed during winter months

Poor management of waste

    Huge amount of wastage pileups have been created in the cities because of high population
     density and congestion in most Indian cities.

    Large numbers of factories have been established across the city area and in the outer circles
     of the city which ignore the system of proper waste disposal.

    Unplanned drains coming out of the slum areas.

    Drainage water gets added to the drinking water and resulting in serious health problem to the
     public.

    In India, ineffective drainage has been a major reason for the spread of water borne diseases.

    Improper disposal of bio-medical waste by several health centres, mainly dental clinics, primary
     health centres, community health centres and diagnostic centres poses a health hazard to the
     general public, sanitation workers and rag pickers.

    Lack of regular supervision of health centres by the Pollution Control Board on disposal of bio-
     medical waste

Falling groundwater tables

    Groundwater levels have dropped in many places across the globe over the past nine years.

    The decline is due to expanding agriculture which in turn has increased water demand.

    Climate change may also accelerate declines in groundwater in some places as precipitation
     patterns are becoming more extreme, increasing the severity of droughts.
 Groundwater currently makes up about 97 percent of all the available fresh water on the planet
      and presently accounts for about 40 percent of our total water supply

Precipitation is Rain, sleet, hail, snow and other forms of water falling from the sky.

Falling groundwater tables

     Groundwater is a key driver of the global economy. If it becomes depleted, entire industries may
      be forced to shut down or move. Whole regions could face acute water scarcity.

     Over-extraction also has serious implications for the environment, especially when the climate is
      warming, as falling water tables can lead to emptying lakes and rivers and dying landscapes as
      the water they depended on is withdrawn.

     In the 10 years since Coca-Cola started operations (2000-2010), groundwater levels have
      plummeted 25.35 meters (83.2 feet)

Preservation and quality of forests

     When deforestation perpetrates, a whole gamut of consequences from soil infertility to global
      warming arises.

     Depletion of forests increases the risk of carbon monoxide in the atmosphere with the resultant
      effect of the reduction of the ozone layer, which leads to global warming.

     Global warming is said to pose a serious danger to civilisation because of its devastating effects
      on the ecosystem.

     Deforestation changes the quantity of water that percolates into the soil which results in
      reduction of evaporation.

Preservation and quality of forests

     Forestry in India is a significant rural industry and a major environmental issue.

     India's forest cover to be about 68 million hectares, or about 20 percent of the country's area.

     India's consumption of fuelwood is about five times higher than what can be sustainably
      removed from forests.

     The variety and distribution of forest vegetation is large. There are 600 species of hardwoods

To achieve sustainable forest and ecological security

     India must pursue rural development and animal husbandry policies to address local
      communities need to find affordable cattle fodder and grazing.
 To avoid destruction of local forest cover, fodder must reach these communities on reliable
      roads and other infrastructure, in all seasons year round.

     Revenue generated from lease of mines must be pooled into a dedicated fund to conserve and
      improve the quality of forests in the region where the mines are located.

     Power to declare ecologically sensitive areas must be with each Indian state.

     Sustainable agro-forestry and farm forestry must be encouraged through financial and
      regulatory reforms, particularly on privately owned lands.

     Government should reform regulations and laws that encourages sustainable Growth of Forest.

     Social organisations and Local people be involved in activities that preserve and conserve forest
      and to maintain ecological security.

Biodiversity loss

     Biodiversity is defined as ‘the variability among living organisms from all sources, including
      terrestrial, marine and other aquatic ecosystems and the ecological complexes of which they are
      a part; this includes diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems’.

     India has a total of 89,451 animal species accounting for 7.31% of the faunal species in the
      world and the flora accounts for 10.78% of the global total.

     44 plant species are critically endangered, 113 endangered and 87 vulnerable. Amongst
      animals, 18 are critically endangered, 54 endangered and 143 are vulnerable.

     The major proximate causes of species extinction are habitat loss and degradation.

     However, the Underlying causes of biodiversity loss are:

             Poverty

             Macroeconomic policies

             International trade factors

             Policy failures

             Poor environmental law/weak enforcement

             Unsustainable development projects and lack of local control over resources

     Population pressures and concomitant increases in the collection of fuelwood and fodder, and
      grazing in forests by local communities too take their toll on the forests, and consequently its
      biodiversity.
Industrial Ecology, CSR and Sustainability

Industrial Ecology

     Industrial ecology is the study

                – of the flows of materials and energy in industrial and consumer activities,

                – of the effects of these flows on the environment,

                – and of the influence of economic, political, regulatory, and social factors of the flow,
            use, and transformation of resources .

     Industrial Ecology has been defined as a "systems-based, multidisciplinary discourse that seeks
      to understand emergent behaviour of complex integrated human/natural systems". The field
      approaches issues of sustainability by examining problems from multiple perspectives, usually
      involving aspects of sociology, the environment, economy and technology.

     Industrial ecology operates at 3 levels

            o   Firms

                        design for environment

                        pollution prevention

                        eco-efficiency

                        green accounting

                        environmental management

            o   Across Firms

                        industrial symbiosis

                        product life-cycles

                        industrial sector initiatives

            o   Regional / Global

                        materials and energy flow studies

                        policies and strategies

                        supply chain management
Corporate Social Responsibility

     Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is about business and industry taking responsibilities
      beyond that of creating economic value.

     “A concept whereby companies integrate social and environmental concerns in their business
      operations and in their interaction with their stakeholders on a voluntary basis”

     CSR policy functions as a built-in, self-regulating mechanism whereby a business monitors and
      ensures its active compliance with the spirit of the law, ethical standards, and international
      norms.

     The goal of CSR is to embrace responsibility for the company's actions and encourage a positive
      impact through its activities on the environment, consumers, employees, communities,
      stakeholders and all other members of the public sphere.

Corporate Social Responsibility in India

     The problem with corporate social responsibility (CSR) is that nobody is very clear about what
      exactly it encompasses.

     The Indian government has been trying to make it mandatory for companies to spend at least
      2% of net profits on CSR.

     Facing strong criticism, it gave up the effort in mid-July 2011 and made the spending voluntary.

     Instead of defining CSR, the Indian government recast it as "responsible business" in a set of
      voluntary guidelines for firms.

     No Clear Definition, but Plenty of Debate

     CSR should actually relate to the way you conduct your business, whereas it gets confused with
      giving to the local communities in which you operate.

Sustainable Development

Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs.

Sustainable development in India

     Sustainable development in India encompasses a variety of development schemes in social,
      cleantech (clean energy, clean water and sustainable agriculture) and human resources
      segments.

     India is expected to begin the greening of its national income accounting, making depletion in
      natural resources wealth a key component in its measurement of gross domestic product (GDP).
Major Achievements

    The number of carbon credits issued for emission reduction projects in India is set to triple to
     246 million by December 2012 from 72 million in November 2009.

    This will cement India's second position in the global carbon credits market (technically called
     Certified Emission Reduction units or CERs).

    India's renewable energy capacity to increase to 20,000 megawatt (MW) by December 2012,
     from the current 15,542 MW.

    The contribution of renewable energy to the power business in India has now reached 70 per
     cent, compared to 10 per cent in 2000.

    Growth in use of green technologies has put India on the green-building leader board with
     countries such as the US. About 2-3 per cent of all construction in India is green, as good as (in)
     the US. In the next two or three years, we want to bring it up to 10 per cent, which will put us on
     top

    The US$ 1.79 billion Indian lighting market is estimated to be growing at 18 per cent annually
     and switching rapidly to energy-efficient systems.

    On the back of the incentive package for electric vehicles average monthly sales of electric two-
     wheelers has risen 20 per cent.

    National Aluminium Company Limited (NALCO), the Navratna PSU, under the Union Ministry of
     Mines, Govt. of India, has become the first PSU in the country by implementing a pilot-cum-
     demonstration project on Carbon Sequestration in its captive power plant at Angul.

Corporate Investments

    State-owned Gujarat Alkalies and Chemicals Limited (GACL) has entered into an agreement with
     a Germany-based specialty chemicals maker, Evonik Industries for setting up a multi-million
     Hydrogen Peroxide and Propylene Oxide (HPPO) project at Dahej in Gujarat. This project would
     be based on an innovative, environment friendly HPPO technology.

    Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), an agency of the US Government, has signed
     an agreement with Azure Power to fund its 15 MW solar photovoltaic (PV) project in Gujarat.
     The investment in the US$ 40 million project will be led by OPIC.

    The world’s first facility to manufacture carbon foam batteries will be set up at Bavla near
     Ahmedabad. Firefly Energy India is planning to build a plant to produce carbon foam batteries at
     an investment of US$ 28 million.
 State Bank of India (SBI), the country’s largest lender, has become a signatory investor in the
     Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), a collaboration of over 550 global institutional investors with
     assets under management of US$ 71 trillion.

CDP is an independent not-for-profit organisation, holding the largest database of primary corporate
climate change information in the world. Over 3,000 organsations across the world’s largest economies
measure and disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and climate change strategies through CDP. These
disclosures aid them in setting reduction targets and make performance improvements.

National Solar Mission

    The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has informed that the progress in
     implementing the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission is satisfactory and according to
     schedule.

    The Ministry has sanctioned 802 MW capacities of grid-connected solar projects and 36 MW of
     off-grid solar projects.

    In addition, six major research projects include setting up of National Centre for Photovoltaic
     Research and Education at IIT-Bombay were also approved.

Government Initiatives

    Planned launch of National Mission in hybrid and electric vehicles.

    Allocations of US$ 89.41 million from National Clean Energy fund for speeding up The National
     Mission for a Green India.

    The budget of the Environment Ministry increased by around US$ 67.1 million.

    Extension of Tax holiday for the power sector by one year.

    A budgetary provision (2011-12) of US$ 56.6 million has been made for research and
     development in new and renewable energy for the first four years of the 11th Five Year Plan of
     the MNRE.

    The government would dole out US$ 335 million over the next two years to banks and finance
     companies to lend money to solar energy projects at a generous 5 per cent interest rate, top
     government official said. The money would be lent to small solar projects adding up to 200 MW
     by companies like Sidbi, Nabard and National Housing Bank. These lenders would be provided
     interest-free loans by IREDA.

    IFC will provide up to US$ 15 million in corporate equity financing to Simran Wind Project Private
     Limited (Simran), a privately-owned entity which is into wind-based power production. The
     company will use the money to finance its pipeline projects worth US$ 40 million in Tamil Nadu.
IFC – International Finance Corporation is a member of the World Bank Group. It finances and provides
advice for private sector ventures and projects in developing countries.

     Punjab government has initiated an ambitious clean energy project to generate 1,500 MW
      power from the ‘run of the canal turbines’. The Punjab Energy Development Agency (Peda) has
      already developed an indigenous prototype of the turbines.

     To facilitate fast track exploration of shale gas, the Ministry for Petroleum and Natural Gas
      expects the process of carving out suitable blocks to be completed by April 2011, which would
      allow floating of the first round of auctions of shale gas blocks in August 2011.

     Solairedirect Energy India is in talks with the Gujarat government to set up a 20 MW plant at the
      Solar Energy Park in Kutch at an estimated cost of US$ 67.1 million.

Shale gas refers to natural gas that is trapped within shale formations. Shales are fine-grained
sedimentary rocks that can be rich sources of petroleum and natural gas.

Reference Text
Krishnamoorthy: Environmental Management (Prentice - Hall India)
Vijay S Chitris : Changing face of the planet and Environmental Law (Snow White)
Tietenberg. Environmental & Natural Resources Economics (Pearson)
G.N. Pandey: Environment Management (Vikas)
Y.K. Saxena & N.K. Oberol: Environment Emplaned (Excel)
N.K. Oberol: Environmental Management (Excel Books)

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Environmental management concepts

  • 1. Environment Management Concept Definition  Its an attempt to control human impact on and interaction with the environment in order to preserve natural resources  Environmental management focuses on the improvement of human welfare for present and future generations.  Administrative functions that develop, implement, and monitor the environmental policy of an organization. Sustainable Development  is a pattern of resource use, that aims to meet human needs while preserving the environment so that these needs can be met not only in the present, but also for generations to come.  The development initiatives be initiated in such a way that the future generations can enjoy the benefits of Nature without any compromise.  Using the resources to the extent to which it is sustained.  Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
  • 2. Significance in India  WHY factor  India is the world's sixth largest and second fastest growing producer of greenhouse gases.  Delhi , Mumbai and Chennai are three of the world's ten most polluted cities.  Two-thirds of city dwellers lack sewerage; one-third lack potable water.  India urban population grows equivalent of another New York City every year. This equals to a projected urban population of over 500 million in 20 years. Trends in Environmental Management  Impact Assessment and Planning (IAP) Assessing environmental and social impacts prior to setting up operations and obtaining environmental approval from the authorities is almost mandatory in most project categories. IAP assessments may be required not only for newly constructed facilities, but also for new operations that will be housed in an existing building.  Environmental Liability and Clean-up Foreign investment has resulted in heightened scrutiny of current and historic environmental liabilities associated with property transactions in India.  Sustainability and Regulatory Compliance The increasing desire of Indian companies to meet world class standards has caused established companies in India to take on sustainability initiatives as a means of improving their global brand and reputation.  Climate Change While India still lags the West in coming up with concrete regulations based on the development versus environment debate, there is an increasing awareness in India that climate change is not about scoring points but about the existence of entire communities inside and outside of India. National Environmental Policy  The National Environment Policy seeks to extend the coverage, and fill in gaps that still exist, in light of present knowledge and accumulated experience.  It does not displace, but builds on the earlier policies.
  • 3. National Forest Policy, 1988  National Conservation Strategy and Policy Statement on Environment and Development, 1992  Policy Statement on Abatement of Pollution,1992  The National Environment Policy is intended to mainstream environmental concerns in all development activities. Objectives of the National Environment Policy  Conservation of Critical Environmental Resources To protect and conserve critical ecological systems and resources, and invaluable natural and man-made heritage, which are essential for life support, livelihoods, economic growth, and a broad conception of human well-being.  Intra-generational Equity: Livelihood Security for the Poor To ensure equitable access to environmental resources and quality for all sections of society, and in particular, to ensure that poor communities, which are most dependent on environmental resources for their livelihoods, are assured secure access to these resources.  Environmental Governance To apply the principles of good governance (transparency, rationality, accountability, reduction in time and costs, participation, and regulatory independence) to the management and regulation of use of environmental resources.  Enhancement of Resources for Environmental Conservation To ensure higher resource flows, comprising finance, technology, management skills, traditional knowledge, and social capital, for environmental conservation through mutually beneficial multistakeholder partnerships between local communities, public agencies, the academic and research community, investors, and multilateral and bilateral development partners. Multilateral Development Banks are institutions that provide financial support and professional advice for economic and social development activities in developing countries. The term Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) typically refers to the World Bank Group and four Regional Development Banks: The African Development Bank The Asian Development Bank The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development The Inter-American Development Bank Group
  • 4. Principles National Environment Policy  Human Beings are at the Centre of Sustainable Development Concerns  The Right to Development The right to development must be fulfilled so as to equitably meet developmental and environmental needs of present and future generations.  Environmental Protection is an Integral part of the Development Process  The Precautionary Approach Where there are credible threats of serious or irreversible damage to key environmental resources, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation.  Economic Efficiency The services of environmental resources be given economic value, and such value to count equally with the economic values of other goods and services, in analysis of alternative courses of action. Example: Polluter Pays  Entities with “Incomparable” Values Significant risks to human health, life, and environmental life-support systems, besides certain other unique natural and man-made entities, which may impact the well-being, broadly conceived, of large numbers of persons, may be considered as ”Incomparable” in that individuals or societies would not accept these risks for compensation in money or conventional goods and services.  Equity The cardinal principle of equity or justice requires that human beings cannot be treated differently based on irrelevant differences between them.  Legal Liability The principle of legal liability may be viewed as an embodiment in legal doctrine of the “polluter pays approach.  Fault Based Liability In a fault based liability regime a party is held liable if it breaches a preexisting legal duty, for example, an environmental standard.
  • 5. Strict Liability Strict liability imposes an obligation to compensate the victim for harm resulting from actions or failure to take action, which may not necessarily constitute a breach of any law or duty of care.  Public Trust Doctrine The State is not an absolute owner, but a trustee of all natural resources, which are by nature meant for public use and enjoyment, subject to reasonable conditions, necessary to protect the legitimate interest of a large number of people, or for matters of strategic national interest.  Decentralization Decentralization involves ceding or transfer of power from a Central Authority to State and Local Authorities, in order to empower public authorities having jurisdiction at the spatial level at which particular environmental issues are salient, to address these issues.  Integration Integration refers to the inclusion of environmental considerations in sectoral policymaking, the integration of the social and natural sciences in environment related policy research, and the strengthening of relevant linkages among various agencies at the Central, State, and Local Self- Government levels, charged with the implementation of environmental policies.  Environmental Standard Setting Environmental standards must reflect the economic and social development situation in which they apply. Standards adopted in one society or context may have unacceptable economic and social costs if applied without discrimination in another society or context.  Preventive Action It is preferable to prevent environmental damage from occurring in the first place, rather than attempting to restore degraded environmental resources after the fact.  Environmental Offsetting There is a general obligation to protect threatened or endangered species and natural systems that are of special importance to sustaining life, providing livelihoods, or general well-being.
  • 6. Regulatory Reforms  Revisiting the Policy and Legislative Framework  Process Related Reforms  Substantive Reforms Process Related Reforms  Approach The objective is to reduce delays and levels of decision-making, realize decentralization of environmental functions, and ensure greater transparency and Accountability.  Framework for Legal Action A judicious mix of civil and criminal processes and sanctions will be employed in the legal regime for enforcement, through a review of the existing legislation. Substantive Reforms  Environment and Forests Clearances Under the new arrangements, there would be significant devolution of powers to the State/UT level.  Coastal Areas  Living Modified Organisms (LMOs)  Environmentally Sensitive Zones  Monitoring of Compliance  Use of Economic Principles in Environmental Decision-making LMOs In order to ensure that development of biotechnology does not lead to unforeseen adverse impacts, the following actions will be taken:  Review the regulatory processes for LMOs so that all relevant scientific knowledge is taken into account, and ecological, health, and economic concerns are adequately addressed.  Periodically review the National Bio-safety Guidelines, and Bio-safety Operations Manual to ensure that these are based on current scientific knowledge.
  • 7. Ensure the conservation of bio-diversity and human health when dealing with LMOs Environmentally Sensitive Zones The following actions will be taken:  Identify and give legal status to Environmentally Sensitive Zones in the country having environmental entities with “Incomparable values” requiring special conservation efforts.  Formulate area development plans for these zones on a scientific basis, with adequate participation by the local communities.  Create local institutions with adequate participation for the environmental management of such areas, to ensure adherence to the approved area development plans, which should be prepared in consultation with the local communities. Monitoring of Compliance The following actions will be taken:  Take measures, including capacity development initiatives to enable Panchayati Raj Institutions and urban local bodies to undertake monitoring of compliance with environmental management plans. Measures will also be taken to encourage municipalities to annually report their environmental performance to their governing bodies.  Develop feasible models of public-private partnerships to leverage financial, technical, and management resources of the private sector in setting up and operating infrastructure for monitoring of environmental compliance, with ironclad safeguards against possible conflict of interest or collusion with the monitored entities.  Use of Economic Principles in Environmental Decision-making: It is necessary that the costs associated with the degradation and depletion of natural resources be incorporated into the decisions of economic actors at various levels, to reverse the tendency to treat these resources as “free goods” and to pass the costs of degradation to other sections of society, or to future generations of the country. Environment The term environment refers to an organization’s natural and human surroundings. An organization’s environment extends from within the organization itself to the global system, and includes air, water, land, flora, fauna, as well as human beings. Current Condition in India  Rapid growing Population
  • 8.  Economic Development  Uncontrolled Growth of Urbanization  Industrialization/ Globalisation  Expansion and Massive Intensification of agriculture  Destruction of Forests Rapid Growth of Population 50% of population to be in Urban cities by 2020 UN projection half of world population to stay in Urban cities by 2008 Environmental Conflict  India lags behind in putting forward any system for planned management of its fragile eco- system that is in constant conflict with the needs of development .  Indian scenario is bleak, what with all round failures in arresting the population growth with attendant pressures on land and scarce natural resources , increasing urbanisation , industrialisation , growth in rapacious consumption , wasteful life styles  In India, relationship between westernised models of development and the preservation environment on the face of its fight against poverty, the conflict exists broadly on three levels:- o Some castigate excessive concern for environment as a result of conspiracy of the developed nations against progress in the underdeveloped countries like India and maintain that India may address issues concerning environment only after it reaches the level of production and consumption of the industrialised nations.  Some others feel that concern for environment is bound to divert attention from the problems of the poor. Environment, to this group has nothing to do with trying to give a better deal to the large and ever growing population.  Some believe that in India at least the very large and ever-growing population is responsible for the environment crises. Environmental Issues in India  Forest and Agricultural Degradation of land  Resource depletion (water, mineral, forest, sand, rocks etc.) is an economic term referring to the exhaustion of raw materials within a region.  Environmental Degradation
  • 9.  Public health  Loss of biodiversity  Loss of resilience in ecosystems  Livelihood security for the poor Forest and Agricultural Degradation of land  Degradation means reduction of  Forest quality - the density and structure of the trees, the ecological services supplied, the biomass of plants and animals, the species diversity.  Fertility and output Quality of Agricultural Land. Biomass is the mass of living biological organisms in a given area or ecosystem at a given time.  Causes:  Land clearance, such as clearcutting and deforestation.  Agricultural depletion of soil nutrients through poor farming practices.  Livestock including overgrazing.  Inappropriate Irrigation and overdrafting.  Urban sprawl and Commercial development.  Land pollution including industrial waste.  Vehicle off-roading.  Quarrying of stone, sand, ore and minerals. Overdrafting is the process of extracting groundwater beyond the safe yield or equilibrium yield of the aquifer. An aquifer is a wet underground layer The Urban sprawl is the spreading of urban developments (as houses and shopping centers) on undeveloped land near a city A commercial clear cut is when cutters remove only the valuable trees and leave others standing.  Effects  Accelerated soil erosion by wind and water  Soil acidification and the formation of acid sulfate soil resulting in barren soil.
  • 10. Soil alkalinisation owing to irrigation with water containing sodium bicarbonate leading to poor soil structure and reduced crop yields.  Soil salination in irrigated land requiring soil salinity control to reclaim the land.  Soil waterlogging in irrigated land which calls for some form of subsurface land drainage to remediate the negative effects.  Destruction of soil structure including loss of organic matter. Environmental Degradation  is defined as any change or disturbance to the environment perceived to be deleterious or undesirable.  Environmental degradation is the deterioration of the environment through  depletion of resources such as air, water and soil  the destruction of ecosystems  the extinction of wildlife. Water resources  Usage of Ground and Underground water by the Industry - causes huge droughts and contamination to a massive area by exploiting an excessive amount of ground water and then replacing it with toxic discharge.  85% of rural drinking water and 55% of urban water comes from underground sources has caused the national water table to suddenly and very dramatically drop.  The rivers are slowly being polluted and destroyed by sewage, chemicals and other agricultural and industrial waste. Deforestation  almost 5.3 Million hectares of forest have been destroyed since the independence for housing, industrialisation and river projects.  Poor management and abuse of power are again the increasingly sad cause behind the mass deforestation- Poaching.  The invasion of foreign tree species such as Eucalyptus etc.  Eucalyptus is water intensive and nutrient intensive.
  • 11. Eucalyptus is toxic, due to allelopathic properties, which serve to reduce not only other plant life, including crops, by restricting germination of other species, but is also detrimental to soil micro and macrofauna. macrofauna (biology), in soil science, animals that are one centimetre or more long but smaller than an earthworm. Potworms, myriapods, centipedes, millipedes Public Health  Public health has often been defined as a science dealing with the determinants and defence of health at the population level, while clinical medicine deals with multiple maladies and their remedies at the level of an individual patient.  Public health aims to understand and influence the social, cultural and economic determinants of health as well as to study and structure health systems as efficient channels for health services delivery. Loss of Biodiversity  Biodiversity is the distribution and number, variety and variability of living organisms over time.  Biodiversity may be diversity within species (genetic diversity), between species (species diversity), and between ecosystems (ecosystem diversity).  Biodiversity includes all ecosystems—wildlands, nature preserves or national parks, plantations, farms, croplands, aquaculture sites, rangelands and urban parks too have their own biodiversity.  Loss in biodiversity has direct and indirect negative effects on Food security, Vulnerability, Health, Energy security, Clean water and Social relations.  Fragmentation of habitats and the sharp decline in small subpopulations of plants and animals bring them on the edge of decline.  18 domestic poultry breeds are under threat and around 40 species of plants and animals have extincted.  India has lost about 40% of its mangroves and some crucial part of its wetlands. Major problems with biodiversity conservation  Low priority for conservation of living natural resources.  Exploitation of living natural resources for monetary gain.  Values and knowledge about the species and ecosystem inadequately known.  Unplanned urbanization and uncontrolled industrialization.
  • 12. Major biodiversity threats  Habitat destruction.  Extension of agriculture.  Filling up of wetlands.  Conversion of rich bio-diversity site for Human settlement and industrial development.  Destruction of coastal areas.  Uncontrolled commercial exploitation. Loss of resilience in ecosystem  Ecosystem resilience describes the capacity of an ecosystem to cope with disturbances, such as storms, fire and pollution, without shifting into a qualitatively different state.  A resilient ecosystem has the capacity to withstand shocks and surprises and, if damaged, to rebuild itself.  In a resilient ecosystem, the process of rebuilding after disturbance promotes renewal and innovation.  Without resilience, ecosystems become vulnerable to the effects of disturbance that previously could be absorbed. Livelihood security for the poor  Poor farmers are unable to cope with adverse climatic conditions can only resort to seasonal migration due to lack of any productive assets or availability of alternative employment options in the village.  Slowdown in agricultural growth and productivity, changing cropping patterns, increase in distress migration, changing consumption patterns, government policies favouring industrial houses, among others have seriously undermined the food and livelihood security of the poorer households. Environmental issues in India  Water pollution  Growing water scarcity  Air pollution  Poor management of waste
  • 13.  Falling groundwater tables  Preservation and quality of forests  Biodiversity loss, and land/soil degradation Water pollution  Discharge of untreated sewage is single most important cause for pollution of surface and ground water in India.  Large gap between generation and treatment of domestic wastewater in India.  India lacks sufficient treatment capacity.  Sewage treatment plants that exist do not operate and are not maintained.  Improper design or poor maintenance or lack of reliable electricity supply to operate the plants, together with absentee employees and poor management.  The untreated industrial wastes have resulted in calcium, magnesium, fluoride, mercury, beta- endosulphan and heptachlor pesticide were more than permissible limit (MPL) in ground and tap waters.  The water has high concentration of COD and BOD (chemical and biochemical oxygen demand), ammonia, phosphate, chloride, chromium, arsenic and chlorpyrifos pesticide in many of the dwellings along the industrial belt.  The ground water also contains nickel and selenium, while the tap water has high concentration of lead, nickel and cadmium. Endosulfan is an off-patent organochlorine insecticide and acaricide that is being phased out globally. Heptachlor is an organochlorine compound that was used as an insecticide. Acaricide: An agent, usually a chemical, that kills mites. Water is Precious and scarce Resource  Only a small fraction (about 3%) is fresh water  India is the wettest country in the world, but rainfall is highly uneven with time and space (with extremely low in Rajasthan and high in North-East)  On an average there are only 40 rainy days  Out of 4000 BCM(Billion Cubic Meter) rainfall received, about 600 BCM is put to use so far.  Water resources are over-exploited resulting in major Water Quality problems.
  • 14. Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974  Preamble: Maintaining and restoring of wholesomeness of water – level of WQ  Provision for consent.  Every polluter (industry or municipality) has to obtain consent from SPCBs/PCCs-State Pollution Control Board (SPCB) Pollution Control Committee (PCC)  Consent is conditional.  Standards prescribed for effluents.  Monitoring the compliance. Major Factors Responsible for WQ Degradation  Domestic: 423 class I cities and 499 class II towns harboring population of 20 Crore generate about 26254 mld of wastewater of which only 6955 mld is treated.  Industrial: About 57,000 polluting industries in India generate about 13,468 mld of wastewater out of which nearly 60% (generated from large & medium industries) is treated.  Non-point sources also contribute significant pollution loads mainly in rainy season. Pesticides consumption is about 1,00,000 tonnes/year of which AP, Haryana, Punjab, TN, WB, Gujarat, UP and Maharashtra are principal consumers.  Domestic sewage is the major source of pollution in India in surface water which contribute pathogens, the main source of water borne diseases along with depletion of oxygen in water bodies.  Sewage along with agricultural run-off and industrial effluents also contributes large amount of nutrients in surface water causing eutrophication  A large part of the domestic sewage is not even collected. This results in stagnation of sewage within city, a good breeding ground for mosquitoes and contaminate the groundwater, the only source of drinking water in many cities. WATER POLLUTION CONTROL STRATEGY  Urban sources – National River Action Plan  Industrial Sources – through consent ( SPCB)  Special Drives: 17 categories of industries  Industries discharging into rivers and lakes
  • 15.  24 Problem areas action plan  Environmental auditing  Common effluent treatment plants for cluster of SSI units (124)  Promotion of low-waste and no-waste technology Recent efforts to address water issues  US$100 billion project to interlink all major river networks in India.  Connect water-deficient areas to water-abundant ones by interlinking 37 Indian rivers.  Transfer water through 30 links across 9,600 kilometers and the project would connect 32 dams.  Aims a transformation of India's water treatment, management, transmission and distribution. Water Scarcity- Indian Scenario  The thirst of water for India’s rapid development is growing day by day.  Large area under the less water conditions/drought prone.  The quality of groundwater is not good.  Water supply of the 90% of India’s territory is served by inter-state rivers.  Growing number of conflicts across the states on water sharing issues. Major Reasons behind Water Scarcity  Population growth and Food production (Agriculture)  Increasing construction/ infrastructure development Activities  Massive urbanization and industrialization throughout the country  Climatic change and variability- Depleting of natural resources due to changing climate conditions (Deforestation etc.)  Lack of implementation of effective water management systems. http://youtube/XGgYTcPzexE
  • 16. Air Pollution  Vehicle emissions are responsible for 70% of the country’s air pollution.  Air pollution from vehicle exhaust and industry is a worsening problem for India.  Exhaust from vehicles has increased eight-fold over levels of twenty years ago; industrial pollution has risen four times.  At average trip speeds between 20 to 40 kilometers per hour, the cars pollutant emission was twice and At average trip speeds between 5 to 20 kilometers per hour, the cars pollutant emissions were 4 to 8 times as much as much as when the average speed was 55 to 75 kilometers per hour.  Some Indian taxis and auto-rickshaws run on adulterated fuel blends.  Some adulterants increase emissions of harmful pollutants from vehicles, worsening urban air pollution.  Fuel adulteration is essentially an unintended consequence of tax policies and the attempt to control fuel prices, in the name of fairness.  India’s environmental problems are exacerbated by its heavy reliance on coal for power generation.  Emits a high amount of carbon and greenhouse gases.  Harmful pollutants like nitrogen and sulphur oxides emitted by aircraft at approximately 35,000ft combine with other gases in the atmosphere to create noxious particulate matter.  8,000 people will die due to aircraft pollutants this year, and 3,500 of them would be from India and China.  Fuelwood and biomass burning is the primary reason for near-permanent haze and smoke observed above rural and urban India, and in satellite pictures of the country.  Fuelwood and biomass cakes are used for cooking and general heating in over 100 million Indian households, and are used two to three times a day, daily.  World Health Organization, claim 300,000 to 400,000 people die of indoor air pollution and carbon monoxide poisoning in India because of biomass burning and use of chullahs. Recent trends in India's air quality  Most Indian cities continue to violate India's and world air quality PM10 targets. Respirable particulate matter pollution remains a key challenge for India.
  • 17.  A decreasing trend has been observed in sulphur dioxide levels in residential areas of many cities such as Delhi, Mumbai, Lucknow, Bhopal during last few years. The decreasing trend in sulphur dioxide levels may be due to recently introduced clean fuel standards, and the increasing use of LPG as domestic fuel instead of coal or fuelwood, and the use of LPG instead of diesel in certain vehicles. PM10 (meaning Particulate Matter 10 micrometers or less in diameter).  Most Indian cities greatly exceed acceptable levels of suspended particulate matter. This is because of refuse and biomass burning, vehicles emissions, power plant emissions, industrial sources.  The Indian air quality monitoring stations reported lower levels of PM10 and suspended particulate matter during monsoon months possibly due to wet deposition and air scrubbing by rainfall. Higher levels of particulates were observed during winter months Poor management of waste  Huge amount of wastage pileups have been created in the cities because of high population density and congestion in most Indian cities.  Large numbers of factories have been established across the city area and in the outer circles of the city which ignore the system of proper waste disposal.  Unplanned drains coming out of the slum areas.  Drainage water gets added to the drinking water and resulting in serious health problem to the public.  In India, ineffective drainage has been a major reason for the spread of water borne diseases.  Improper disposal of bio-medical waste by several health centres, mainly dental clinics, primary health centres, community health centres and diagnostic centres poses a health hazard to the general public, sanitation workers and rag pickers.  Lack of regular supervision of health centres by the Pollution Control Board on disposal of bio- medical waste Falling groundwater tables  Groundwater levels have dropped in many places across the globe over the past nine years.  The decline is due to expanding agriculture which in turn has increased water demand.  Climate change may also accelerate declines in groundwater in some places as precipitation patterns are becoming more extreme, increasing the severity of droughts.
  • 18.  Groundwater currently makes up about 97 percent of all the available fresh water on the planet and presently accounts for about 40 percent of our total water supply Precipitation is Rain, sleet, hail, snow and other forms of water falling from the sky. Falling groundwater tables  Groundwater is a key driver of the global economy. If it becomes depleted, entire industries may be forced to shut down or move. Whole regions could face acute water scarcity.  Over-extraction also has serious implications for the environment, especially when the climate is warming, as falling water tables can lead to emptying lakes and rivers and dying landscapes as the water they depended on is withdrawn.  In the 10 years since Coca-Cola started operations (2000-2010), groundwater levels have plummeted 25.35 meters (83.2 feet) Preservation and quality of forests  When deforestation perpetrates, a whole gamut of consequences from soil infertility to global warming arises.  Depletion of forests increases the risk of carbon monoxide in the atmosphere with the resultant effect of the reduction of the ozone layer, which leads to global warming.  Global warming is said to pose a serious danger to civilisation because of its devastating effects on the ecosystem.  Deforestation changes the quantity of water that percolates into the soil which results in reduction of evaporation. Preservation and quality of forests  Forestry in India is a significant rural industry and a major environmental issue.  India's forest cover to be about 68 million hectares, or about 20 percent of the country's area.  India's consumption of fuelwood is about five times higher than what can be sustainably removed from forests.  The variety and distribution of forest vegetation is large. There are 600 species of hardwoods To achieve sustainable forest and ecological security  India must pursue rural development and animal husbandry policies to address local communities need to find affordable cattle fodder and grazing.
  • 19.  To avoid destruction of local forest cover, fodder must reach these communities on reliable roads and other infrastructure, in all seasons year round.  Revenue generated from lease of mines must be pooled into a dedicated fund to conserve and improve the quality of forests in the region where the mines are located.  Power to declare ecologically sensitive areas must be with each Indian state.  Sustainable agro-forestry and farm forestry must be encouraged through financial and regulatory reforms, particularly on privately owned lands.  Government should reform regulations and laws that encourages sustainable Growth of Forest.  Social organisations and Local people be involved in activities that preserve and conserve forest and to maintain ecological security. Biodiversity loss  Biodiversity is defined as ‘the variability among living organisms from all sources, including terrestrial, marine and other aquatic ecosystems and the ecological complexes of which they are a part; this includes diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems’.  India has a total of 89,451 animal species accounting for 7.31% of the faunal species in the world and the flora accounts for 10.78% of the global total.  44 plant species are critically endangered, 113 endangered and 87 vulnerable. Amongst animals, 18 are critically endangered, 54 endangered and 143 are vulnerable.  The major proximate causes of species extinction are habitat loss and degradation.  However, the Underlying causes of biodiversity loss are:  Poverty  Macroeconomic policies  International trade factors  Policy failures  Poor environmental law/weak enforcement  Unsustainable development projects and lack of local control over resources  Population pressures and concomitant increases in the collection of fuelwood and fodder, and grazing in forests by local communities too take their toll on the forests, and consequently its biodiversity.
  • 20. Industrial Ecology, CSR and Sustainability Industrial Ecology  Industrial ecology is the study – of the flows of materials and energy in industrial and consumer activities, – of the effects of these flows on the environment, – and of the influence of economic, political, regulatory, and social factors of the flow, use, and transformation of resources .  Industrial Ecology has been defined as a "systems-based, multidisciplinary discourse that seeks to understand emergent behaviour of complex integrated human/natural systems". The field approaches issues of sustainability by examining problems from multiple perspectives, usually involving aspects of sociology, the environment, economy and technology.  Industrial ecology operates at 3 levels o Firms  design for environment  pollution prevention  eco-efficiency  green accounting  environmental management o Across Firms  industrial symbiosis  product life-cycles  industrial sector initiatives o Regional / Global  materials and energy flow studies  policies and strategies  supply chain management
  • 21. Corporate Social Responsibility  Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is about business and industry taking responsibilities beyond that of creating economic value.  “A concept whereby companies integrate social and environmental concerns in their business operations and in their interaction with their stakeholders on a voluntary basis”  CSR policy functions as a built-in, self-regulating mechanism whereby a business monitors and ensures its active compliance with the spirit of the law, ethical standards, and international norms.  The goal of CSR is to embrace responsibility for the company's actions and encourage a positive impact through its activities on the environment, consumers, employees, communities, stakeholders and all other members of the public sphere. Corporate Social Responsibility in India  The problem with corporate social responsibility (CSR) is that nobody is very clear about what exactly it encompasses.  The Indian government has been trying to make it mandatory for companies to spend at least 2% of net profits on CSR.  Facing strong criticism, it gave up the effort in mid-July 2011 and made the spending voluntary.  Instead of defining CSR, the Indian government recast it as "responsible business" in a set of voluntary guidelines for firms.  No Clear Definition, but Plenty of Debate  CSR should actually relate to the way you conduct your business, whereas it gets confused with giving to the local communities in which you operate. Sustainable Development Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Sustainable development in India  Sustainable development in India encompasses a variety of development schemes in social, cleantech (clean energy, clean water and sustainable agriculture) and human resources segments.  India is expected to begin the greening of its national income accounting, making depletion in natural resources wealth a key component in its measurement of gross domestic product (GDP).
  • 22. Major Achievements  The number of carbon credits issued for emission reduction projects in India is set to triple to 246 million by December 2012 from 72 million in November 2009.  This will cement India's second position in the global carbon credits market (technically called Certified Emission Reduction units or CERs).  India's renewable energy capacity to increase to 20,000 megawatt (MW) by December 2012, from the current 15,542 MW.  The contribution of renewable energy to the power business in India has now reached 70 per cent, compared to 10 per cent in 2000.  Growth in use of green technologies has put India on the green-building leader board with countries such as the US. About 2-3 per cent of all construction in India is green, as good as (in) the US. In the next two or three years, we want to bring it up to 10 per cent, which will put us on top  The US$ 1.79 billion Indian lighting market is estimated to be growing at 18 per cent annually and switching rapidly to energy-efficient systems.  On the back of the incentive package for electric vehicles average monthly sales of electric two- wheelers has risen 20 per cent.  National Aluminium Company Limited (NALCO), the Navratna PSU, under the Union Ministry of Mines, Govt. of India, has become the first PSU in the country by implementing a pilot-cum- demonstration project on Carbon Sequestration in its captive power plant at Angul. Corporate Investments  State-owned Gujarat Alkalies and Chemicals Limited (GACL) has entered into an agreement with a Germany-based specialty chemicals maker, Evonik Industries for setting up a multi-million Hydrogen Peroxide and Propylene Oxide (HPPO) project at Dahej in Gujarat. This project would be based on an innovative, environment friendly HPPO technology.  Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), an agency of the US Government, has signed an agreement with Azure Power to fund its 15 MW solar photovoltaic (PV) project in Gujarat. The investment in the US$ 40 million project will be led by OPIC.  The world’s first facility to manufacture carbon foam batteries will be set up at Bavla near Ahmedabad. Firefly Energy India is planning to build a plant to produce carbon foam batteries at an investment of US$ 28 million.
  • 23.  State Bank of India (SBI), the country’s largest lender, has become a signatory investor in the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), a collaboration of over 550 global institutional investors with assets under management of US$ 71 trillion. CDP is an independent not-for-profit organisation, holding the largest database of primary corporate climate change information in the world. Over 3,000 organsations across the world’s largest economies measure and disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and climate change strategies through CDP. These disclosures aid them in setting reduction targets and make performance improvements. National Solar Mission  The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has informed that the progress in implementing the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission is satisfactory and according to schedule.  The Ministry has sanctioned 802 MW capacities of grid-connected solar projects and 36 MW of off-grid solar projects.  In addition, six major research projects include setting up of National Centre for Photovoltaic Research and Education at IIT-Bombay were also approved. Government Initiatives  Planned launch of National Mission in hybrid and electric vehicles.  Allocations of US$ 89.41 million from National Clean Energy fund for speeding up The National Mission for a Green India.  The budget of the Environment Ministry increased by around US$ 67.1 million.  Extension of Tax holiday for the power sector by one year.  A budgetary provision (2011-12) of US$ 56.6 million has been made for research and development in new and renewable energy for the first four years of the 11th Five Year Plan of the MNRE.  The government would dole out US$ 335 million over the next two years to banks and finance companies to lend money to solar energy projects at a generous 5 per cent interest rate, top government official said. The money would be lent to small solar projects adding up to 200 MW by companies like Sidbi, Nabard and National Housing Bank. These lenders would be provided interest-free loans by IREDA.  IFC will provide up to US$ 15 million in corporate equity financing to Simran Wind Project Private Limited (Simran), a privately-owned entity which is into wind-based power production. The company will use the money to finance its pipeline projects worth US$ 40 million in Tamil Nadu.
  • 24. IFC – International Finance Corporation is a member of the World Bank Group. It finances and provides advice for private sector ventures and projects in developing countries.  Punjab government has initiated an ambitious clean energy project to generate 1,500 MW power from the ‘run of the canal turbines’. The Punjab Energy Development Agency (Peda) has already developed an indigenous prototype of the turbines.  To facilitate fast track exploration of shale gas, the Ministry for Petroleum and Natural Gas expects the process of carving out suitable blocks to be completed by April 2011, which would allow floating of the first round of auctions of shale gas blocks in August 2011.  Solairedirect Energy India is in talks with the Gujarat government to set up a 20 MW plant at the Solar Energy Park in Kutch at an estimated cost of US$ 67.1 million. Shale gas refers to natural gas that is trapped within shale formations. Shales are fine-grained sedimentary rocks that can be rich sources of petroleum and natural gas. Reference Text Krishnamoorthy: Environmental Management (Prentice - Hall India) Vijay S Chitris : Changing face of the planet and Environmental Law (Snow White) Tietenberg. Environmental & Natural Resources Economics (Pearson) G.N. Pandey: Environment Management (Vikas) Y.K. Saxena & N.K. Oberol: Environment Emplaned (Excel) N.K. Oberol: Environmental Management (Excel Books)