3 November 2016

Green farms and clean air

massive pollution cloud enveloping northern India every year is a good example of the disconnect between official policy and ground realities. It has been known for long that burning of agricultural waste in the northern States significantly contributes to the poor air quality in large parts of the Indo-Gangetic Basin, with local and cascading impacts felt from Punjab all the way to West Bengal. Harmful fine particulate matter measuring 2.5 mm in diameter (PM2.5) is among the pollutants released. Punjab responded to the issue with a prohibition on the burning of paddy straw, and the launch of initiatives aimed at better utilisation of biomass, including as a fuel to produce power. Yet, there is no mission mode approach to the annual crisis. The efforts do not match the scale of agricultural residues produced, for one, and fail to address farmers’ anxiety to remove the surplus from the fields quickly to make way for the next crop. The national production of crop waste is of the order of 500 million tonnes a year, with Uttar Pradesh, Punjab and West Bengal topping the list. Again, 80 per cent of straw from paddy is burnt in some States, impacting air quality and depriving croplands of nutrients.
It is an irony that the national capital and several other cities suffer crippling pollution in the post-monsoon and winter months partly due to biomass burning, when demand for fodder is rising and the surplus material could be used productively. Pilot projects to produce power using biomass demonstrated in Rajasthan, and mechanised composting and biogas production units of the Indian Agricultural Research Institute could be scaled up, and farmers given liberal support to deploy such solutions. Given the twin benefits of pollution abatement and better productivity, conservation agriculture needs to be popularised. This would encourage farmers to use newer low-till seeding technologies that allow much of the crop residues to remain on site, and curb the release of a variety of pollutants. Burning residues add greenhouse gases that cause global warming, besides pollutants such as carbon monoxide, ammonia, nitrous oxide and sulphur dioxide that severely affect human health. Sustained work is called for, given that higher agricultural productivity to meet food needs is inevitable, with a cascading increase in biomass volumes. The challenge is to identify measures to utilise it. By one estimate, if India can reach its own air quality standards for fine particulate matter from all sources, annual premature deaths can be cut by almost 10 per cent. A programme to cut pollution from waste-burning would be a good start.

NASA completes construction of largest space telescope

It’s 100 times powerful than the Hubble Space Telescope and may help in finding the first galaxies
NASA has successfully completed building the largest space telescope — one that is 100 times powerful than the Hubble Space Telescope and may find the first galaxies that were formed in the early universe.
The James Webb Space Telescope will be the successor to NASA’s 26-year-old Hubble telescope.
The Webb telescope’s infrared cameras are so sensitive that it needs to be shielded from the rays of the Sun. A five-layer sunshield of the size of a tennis court will prevent the heat from interfering with the telescope’s infrared sensors.
The layers work together to reduce the temperatures between the hot and cold sides of the observatory by about 298 degrees Celsius. Each successive layer of the sunshield, made of kapton, is cooler than the one below.
The U.S. space agency has also made the first important optical measurement of James Webb Space Telescope fully assembled primary mirror, called a Center of Curvature test.
“This is the only test of the entire mirror where we can use the same equipment during a before and after test,” said Ritva Keski-Kuha, NASA’s Deputy telescope manager for Webb.
“This test will show if there are any changes or damages to the optical system,” Keski-Kuha said.
The space telescope will provide images of the first galaxies ever formed, and explore planets around distant stars.
It is a joint project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency.

GST rate structure finalised, majority of items in 12% and 18% tax slabs

GST rate structure finalised, majority of items in 12% and 18% tax slabs

On demerit and sin goods like aerated drinks, luxury cars, tobacco and pan masala, a cess will be levied by the centre over and above the 28% GST rate
d services tax (GST), the centre and the states managed to reach a consensus on the tax rates and the tax slabs under this ambitious tax regime.
The decision, arrived at by a consensus, proposes a multi-tiered tax system aimed at minimizing the inflationary impact on the common man, finance minister Arun Jaitley said at a press conference after the end of the first day of the fourth GST council meeting.
As per the rate structure agreed upon by the centre and the states, 50% of the items present in the consumer price index basket, including foodgrains like rice and wheat, will be exempted from the levy of GST.
The lowest tax slab will be 5% wherein items of mass consumption will be taxed. There will be two standard rates of 12% and 18% where a majority of the items used by the common man will be taxed. There will be a higher slab of 28% where items currently attracting a tax of 27-31% will be taxed. However, items used by the middle class like toothpastes, soaps and oil which currently have a high tax incidence of more than 27% will be brought down to the lower slab of 18%.
On demerit and sin goods like aerated drinks, luxury cars, tobacco and pan masala, a cess will be levied by the centre over and above the 28%. This amount along with the proceeds of the clean energy cess will be used to compensate states for losses arising from GST. However, this cess will have a sunset clause of five years.
A technical committee comprising of central government and state government officials will finalize the allocation of items into different rate categories. The tax rate on gold will be decided after this allocation of items.

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Essential items including food, which presently constitute roughly half of the consumer inflation basket, will be taxed at zero rate.
A four-tier GST tax structure of 5, 12, 18 and 28 per cent, with lower rates for essential items and the highest for luxury and de-merits goods that would also attract an additional cess, was decided by the GST Council on Thursday.
With a view to keeping inflation under check, essential items including food, which presently constitute roughly half of the consumer inflation basket, will be taxed at zero rate.
The lowest rate of 5 per cent would be for common use items while there would be two standard rates of 12 and 18 per cent under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime targetted to be rolled out from April 1, 2017.
Announcing the decisions arrived at the first day of the two-day GST Council meeting, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said highest tax slab will be applicable to items which are currently taxed at 30-31 per cent (excise duty plus VAT).
Luxury cars, tobacco and aerated drinks would also be levied with an additional cess on top of the highest tax rate.
The collection from this cess as well as that of the clean energy cess would create a revenue pool which would be used for compensating states for any loss of revenue during the first five years of implementation of GST.
The cess, he said, would be lapsable after five years.
Mr. Jaitley said about Rs. 50,000 crore would be needed to compensate states for loss of revenue from rollout of GST, which is to subsume a host of central and state taxes like excise duty, service tax and VAT, in the first year.
The four-tier tax structure agreed to has slight modification to the 6, 12, 18 and 26 per cent slab that were under discussion at the GST Council last month.
The structure to agreed is a compromise to accommodate demand for highest tax rate of 40 per cent by states like Kerala.
While the Centre proposed to levy a 4 per cent GST on gold, a final decision was put off, Mr. Jaitley said.

Entire Country gets National Food Security Act coverage

Entire Country gets National Food Security Act coverage
Kerala and Tamil Nadu have also rolled out the National Food Security Act (NFSA). With this, now the Act has been implemented in all the States and Union Territories. As a result, now 81.34 crore persons will get wheat at Rs. 2/ kg and rice at Rs. 3/ kg. This was announced by Union Minister of Consumer Affair, Food & Public Distribution, Shri Ram Vilas Paswan while interacting with the media here today. Being an important initiative for ensuring food security of the people, the Government of India actively pursued with all the States/UTs for its early implementation.
Shri Paswan said now the Center will focus on further reforms in PDS, which will include end to end computerization of the system for which States/UTs are being technically and financially assisted. He said this is important for bringing in transparency in the functioning of the public distribution system (PDS), which is vital feature of NFSA, in order to check leakages and diversion of foodgrains.
Highlighting other initiatives taken by the Centre to make the PDS leakage proof, Shri Paswan said that the beneficiary’s data base has been digitized in all the 36 States/UTs, wherein, information is available right upto beneficiary level and is in the public domain. Online allocation of foodgrains in being done in 28 States/UTs, and the entire foodgrain supply chain has been computerized in 18 States/UTs. 100 percent linkage of Ration Cards with Addhar, which is 71% at the moment, will be achieved. Foodgrains losses of FCI have been brought down to 0.04 percent and major FCI depots have been made online.
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. In another significant step towards better targeting and leakage-free distribution of foodgrains, direct benefit transfer is being carried out in two different modes. In the first mode, food subsidy is being transferred in cash into the bank account of beneficiaries, who then have the choice to buy foodgrains from the open market. This has been started in UTs of Chandigarh, Puducherry and urban areas of Dadra & Nagar Haveli. The second mode involves automation of fair price shops, for distribution of foodgrains through an electronic point of sale (e-PoS) device which authenticates beneficiaries at the time of distribution and also electronically captures the quantum of foodgrains distributed to the family. As of 31.10.2016, e-PoS devices are operational in 1,61,854 fair price shops.
For smooth functioning of PDS, State Governments are also being provided Central assistance for meeting expenditure of intra-State transportation & handling of foodgrains and fair price shop dealer’s margin. The assistance for fair price shops dealers margin also contains a component of assistance for installation and operation of Pos devices at fair price shops. So far, Rs. 1874 crore has been released to State Governments by the Government of India in 2016-17.
At this current coverage, monthly allocation of foodgrains to States/UTs under the Act is about 45.5 lakh tons, with subsidy implication of about Rs. 11,726 core per month or about Rs. 1,40, 700 crore per year.
Regarding Sugarcane arrears, Shri Paswan said 2014-15 arrears which were Rs.21,000 at the peak have now come down Rs 205 crore. Prices of pulses except Chana have come down. Regarding wheat prices he said that Government has decided to release additional 10 lakh ton wheat for sale in domestic Market under FCI OMS scheme.

Prime Minister’s address at Asian Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction

Prime Minister’s address at Asian Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction 


Friends,
2015 was a momentous year! Apart from the Sendai Framework, the international community adopted two other major frameworks to shape the future of humanity:
- the Sustainable Development Goals,
- and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
The spirit of inter-connectedness, highlighted in the film, is the hallmark of these global frameworks. The success of each one of these depends on the success of the other two. Disaster Risk Reduction has a pivotal role in supporting adaptation to climate change as well as sustainable development. It is in this context that this conference becomes timely and relevant.
Friends,
Over the last two decades, the world, and especially our region has undergone many changes – most of them positive. Many countries in our region have transformed their economies and become engines of global economic growth. Hundreds of millions of our people have been lifted out of poverty. The Asia-Pacific region has been a global leader in more ways than one.
But we must not take this progress for granted. There are challenges as well. Over the last twenty years, more than eight hundred and fifty thousand people died from disasters in the Asia-Pacific. Seven of the top ten countries in the world in terms of number of deaths due to disasters are in the Asia-Pacific.
I have seen for myself the human suffering caused by disasters. I witnessed the Gujarat earthquake of 2001, and later, as Chief Minister of the State, I worked with my people to support post-earthquake recovery. It was distressing to see the suffering of the affected people. But I was also inspired by their courage, ingenuity and resolve to recover from the disaster. In my experience, the more we relied on people’s own leadership, the better were the outcomes. This was not limited only to owner driven reconstruction of houses, but also to construction of community buildings. For example, when we entrusted the community the task of reconstructing a school, the earthquake-resistant building was completed in time, at a lesser cost, and the savings were returned to Government. We need to support such initiative and leadership through policies and practices.
Friends,
We in Asia have learnt from disasters. A quarter century ago, only a handful of Asian nations had national disaster management institutions. Today, over thirty Asian countries have dedicated institutions leading disaster risk management efforts. After the Indian Ocean Tsunami of 2004, the five worst affected countries brought in new laws for disaster risk management. In a couple of days, we will observe the first International Tsunami Awareness Day. This would be an occasion to celebrate the huge improvements we have made in tsunami early warning. In December 2004, the Indian Ocean Tsunami caught us unprepared, and there was no warning. We now have a fully functional Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System. Along with its Australian and Indonesian counterparts, the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services is mandated to issue regional tsunami bulletins.
The same goes for improvements in cyclone early warning. In India, if we compare the impact of cyclone events in 1999 and 2013, we can see the progress we have made. Similar progress has been made in many countries. For example, after the 1991 cyclone, the Government of Bangladesh launched a large community-based cyclone preparedness programme. It led to a significant reduction in loss of lives from cyclones. It is now recognized as a global best practice.
Friends,
This is just the beginning. There are daunting challenges ahead. The Asia-Pacific is rapidly urbanizing. Perhaps within a decade more people in the region will live in cities than in villages. Urbanization will pose greater challenges for disaster risk management, by concentrating people, property and economic activity in smaller areas, many of them in disaster prone locations. If we do not manage this growth, in terms of both planning and execution, the risk of economic and human losses from disasters will be higher than ever before.

In this context, let me outline a ten-point agenda for renewing our efforts towards disaster risk reduction:
First, all development sectors must imbibe the principles of disaster risk management. This will ensure that all development projects - airports, roads, canals, hospitals, schools, bridges – are built to appropriate standards and contribute to the resilience of communities they seek to serve. Over the next couple of decades, most of the new infrastructure in the world will come up in our region. We need to ensure that we build it to best available standards of disaster safety. This is a smart strategy, which pays off in the long term.
All our public expenditure must take into account risk considerations. In India, the ‘housing for all’ programme and ‘smart cities’ initiative represent such opportunities. India will work with other partner countries and stakeholders to build a coalition or centre for promoting disaster resilient infrastructure in the region. This will help generate new knowledge for hazard risk assessment, disaster resilient technologies and mechanisms for integrating risk reduction in infrastructure financing.
Second, work towards risk coverage for all – starting from poor households to small and medium enterprises to multi-national corporations to nation states. Currently, in most countries of the region, penetration of insurance is limited to only middle and upper-middle income groups. We need to think big and also think innovatively. States have an important role in not just regulating but also encouraging coverage for those who need it the most. In India, we have taken bold steps to ensure financial inclusion and risk insurance for the poorest. The Jan Dhan Yojana has brought millions of people into the banking system. The Suraksha Bima Yojana provides risk insurance to millions who need it the most. We have launched the Fasal Bima Yojana, which will provide risk cover to millions of farmers. These are the basic building blocks of resilience at the household level.
Third, encourage greater involvement and leadership of women in disaster risk management. Women are disproportionately affected by disasters. They also have unique strengths and insights. We must train a large number of women volunteers to support special needs of women affected by disasters. We need women engineers, masons and building artisans supporting reconstruction, and women self help groups assisting livelihood recovery.
Fourth, invest in risk mapping globally. For mapping risks related to hazards such as earthquakes we have widely accepted standards and parameters. Based on these, in India, we have mapped seismic zones, with five as highest seismic risk and two as low risk. For disaster risk related to other hazards such as chemical hazards, forest fires, cyclones, different types of floods, we need to evolve similar globally accepted risk categories. This will help us ensure that we have a common understanding of the nature and severity of disaster risks in different parts of the world.
Fifth, leverage technology to enhance the efficiency of our disaster risk management efforts. An e-platform that brings together organizations and individuals and helps them map and exchange expertise, technology and resources would go a long way in maximizing our collective impact.
Sixth, develop a network of universities to work on disaster issues. After all, universities have social responsibilities too. Over the first five years of the Sendai Framework, we should develop a global network of universities working together on problems of disaster risk management. As part of this network, different universities could specialize in multi-disciplinary research on disaster issues most relevant to them. Universities located in coastal areas could specialize in managing risks from coastal hazards, and the ones located in the hill cities could focus on mountain hazards.
Seventh, utilize the opportunities provided by social media and mobile technologies. Social media is transforming disaster response. It is helping response agencies in quickly organizing themselves, and enabling citizens to connect more easily with authorities. In disaster after disaster, affected people are using social media to help each other. We must recognize the potential of social media and develop applications for all aspects of disaster risk management.
Eighth, build on local capacity and initiative. The task of disaster risk management, particularly in rapidly growing economies, is so huge that formal institutions of the state can at best be instrumental in creating the enabling conditions. Specific actions have to be designed and implemented locally. Over the last two decades, most community based efforts have been confined to disaster preparedness and contingency planning for the short term. We need to expand the scope of community based efforts and support communities to identify local risk reduction measures and implement them. Such efforts reduce risk and create opportunities for local development and sustainable livelihoods. Localization of disaster risk reduction will also ensure that we make the most of traditional best practices and indigenous knowledge.
Response agencies need to interact with their communities, and make them familiar with the essential drill of disaster response. For example, if a local fire service visits one school in its area every week, it would sensitize thousands of children over a period of one year.
Ninth, ensure that the opportunity to learn from a disaster is not wasted. After every disaster there are papers and reports on lessons learnt that are rarely applied. Often the same mistakes are repeated. We need a more vibrant and visual system of learning. The United Nations could start an international competition of documentary films that record disaster events, their scale, and relief, rehabilitation, reconstruction and recovery afterwards.
Post-disaster recovery is an opportunity to not just ‘build back better’ in terms of physical infrastructure, but also in terms of improved institutional systems for managing risk. For this we need to put in place systems that can quickly provide risk assessments. India will work with partner countries and multilateral development agencies to establish a facility for technical support to post-disaster reconstruction of houses.
And finally, bring about greater cohesion in international response to disasters. In the aftermath of a disaster, disaster responders pour in from all over the world. This collective strength and solidarity could be enhanced further if we work under a common umbrella. The United Nations could think of a common logo and branding under which all those who are helping with relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction operate.
Friends.
Armed Forces protect nation states against external security threats. But to deal with disasters, we need to equip society with the right education.
We have to wholeheartedly embrace the spirit of Sendai, which calls for an all-of-society approach to disaster risk management.
In India, we are committed to walk the talk on the implementation of Sendai Framework. In June this year, India’s National Disaster Management Plan was released which is aligned with the priorities set out in the Sendai Framework.
In our effort to build disaster resilience, we stand shoulder to shoulder with all the nations of the region. Regional and International Cooperation has an important role in providing an added push to our efforts.
Last year in November, India organized the first-ever South Asian Annual Disaster Management Exercise. In the spirit of regional cooperation, India will soon launch the South Asia Satellite. The capabilities of this satellite and other space-based technologies can support the full disaster risk management cycle – risk assessment, risk mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery. India is ready to make its space capabilities available to any country for purposes of disaster risk management.
As we implement the Sendai Framework, we would welcome new opportunities for regional and international collaboration.
I am sure, this conference will energize our efforts and the outcomes of the conference will provide a solid blueprint for collective action.
Thank you.

1 November 2016

Mystery behind why satellites lose GPS connection solved

Mystery behind why satellites lose GPS connection solved

As per the study, ionospheric thunderstorms have a direct link with the loss of connection to GPS
“Thunderstorms” in the ionosphere are to blame for the black out of the global positioning system (GPS) on low-orbiting satellites when they fly over the equator between Africa and South America, a new study has found.
European Space Agency’s (ESA) Swarm, a trio of satellites, is measuring and untangling the different magnetic fields that stem from earth’s core, mantle, crust, oceans, ionosphere and magnetosphere. The Swarm satellites carry GPS receivers as part of their positioning system so that operators keep them in the correct orbits. In addition, GPS pinpoints where the satellites are making their scientific measurements.
However, sometimes the satellites lose their GPS connection. In fact, during their first two years in orbit, the link was broken 166 times. The new study shows that there is a direct link between these blackouts and ionospheric “thunderstorms”, around 300–600 km above earth.
“Ionospheric thunderstorms are well known, but now we have been able to show a direct link between these storms and the loss of connection to GPS,” said Claudia Stolle from the GFZ research centre in Germany. “This is thanks to Swarm because it is the first time that high-resolution GPS and ionospheric patterns can be detected from the same satellite,” said Stolle.
These thunderstorms occur when the number of electrons in the ionosphere undergoes large and rapid changes. This tends to happen close to earth’s magnetic equator and typically just for a couple of hours between sunset and midnight. The ionosphere is where atoms are broken up by sunlight, which leads to free electrons. A thunderstorm scatters these free electrons, creating small bubbles with little or no ionised material. These bubbles disturb the GPS signals so that the Swarm GPS receivers can lose track. As many as 161 of the lost signal events coincided with ionospheric thunderstorms. The other five were over the polar regions and corresponded to increased strong solar winds that cause earth’s protective magnetosphere to “wobble”.
Resolving the mystery of blackouts is not only good news for Swarm, but also for other low-orbiting satellites experiencing the same problem. “What we see here is a striking example of a technical challenge being turned into exciting science, a true essence of an earth explorer mission such as Swarm,” said Rune Floberghagen, ESA’s Swarm mission manager. “These new findings demonstrate that GPS can be used as a tool for understanding dynamics in the ionosphere related to solar activity. Perhaps one day we will also be able to link these ionospheric thunderstorms with the lightning we see from the ground,” said Floberghagen.

Is it possible to live a life without plastic?

Is it possible to live a life without plastic?

With the Diwali haze turning our air poisonous, a reporter goes on a quest to find out the challenges of living an eco-friendly urban life
Until quite recently, a minimum of 40 plastic carry bags would enter my house every single week as a result of grocery shopping alone. I would say a more honest assessment for some weeks would be about 70. The math is simple: On an average, at least 160 such bags in a month, and more than 2,000 in a year, which then served no other purpose than to occasionally function as garbage bags. Of course, we also had a supply of black garbage bags.
All of these would eventually find their way into a landfill, most likely the very spot that is Delhi’s most shameful: a massive landfill that’s become a large hill at the gateway to the city from the north, birds of prey circling it at all times of the day, and alongside which is the city’s largest wholesale market, the Azadpur mandi, which supplies a large part of the fruits and vegetables that we eat.
We got home these carry bags even if, on the majority of occasions we went to the neighbourhood stores, a large shopping bag would be slung across the shoulder. The instinct of the good shopkeeper’s assistant is to speedily pack the goods inside the plastic bag while we’re paying up. And our instinct is to stuff the bag inside our own, with each additional bag neatly demarcating our purchases, and even keeping our precious cloth bag clean from the wetness and messiness of vegetables, if that’s what we were buying.
Is it possible to live a life without plastic?
If, with some effort, we manage to do away with the convenience of these carry bags, there are the packaged goods that we are confronted with—in food alone, there is, for instance, our rice, dal, biscuits, oil, spices or milk. The type of packaging they come in matters; at a subconscious level, we have come to identify this with the quality of the product, and known brands have the upper hand here.

However, reports over recent years from the laboratory of the Centre for Science and Environment, a New Delhi-based non-profit, alone have suggested how very wrong this perception may be. While pesticides were found in well-known brands of honey and soft drinks, the factory-made brands of bread that are a daily purchase in a majority of Indian households, including mine, as well as those used in many popular pizza and burger chains, revealed traces of the chemicals potassium iodate and potassium bromate, both serious health hazards with carcinogenic properties that are banned in many countries.
A waste- paper recycling plant in Meerut
A waste- paper recycling plant in Meerut
In January, a report from the World Economic Forum, the Ellen McArthur Foundation and McKinsey & Co, The New Plastics Economy: Rethinking The Future Of Plastics, revealed that “plastics production has surged over the past 50 years, from 15 million tonnes in 1964 to 311 million tonnes in 2014, and is expected to double again over the next 20 years”. The report further found that “95% of plastic packaging material value (which also represents 26% of the total volume of plastics produced), or $80-120 billion (Rs5.3 trillion) annually, is lost to the economy after a short first use. More than 40 years after the launch of the first universal recycling symbol, only 14% of plastic packaging is collected for recycling”.
Let’s put all these numbers and percentages that your eyes glazed over in perspective. Since a large volume of plastic waste leaks into the ocean every year, the World Economic Forum has calculated that by 2050—which is not a long way off—there will be more plastic in the ocean than fish.
Disgusted already?
***
For a few years now, scientists have been raging over a matter of nomenclature: on whether to call the times we live in the Anthropocene epoch. This literally means that the activities of human beings have had a significant and permanent negative impact on Earth’s environment and climate. It is a remarkably sobering thought that a single species could have done so much damage.
While some scientists may argue over the kind of precise evidence required to announce a new geological era, the fact remains that the arrogance with which we live, unmindful of other lives on this planet, is evident everywhere. How frequently do we now read of animals venturing out of the dwindling forest spaces on to our (a necessary accentuation in our brain) roads? Of species being choked into extinction? And the unpredictability of our climate is now so stark as to be the topic of conversation even in urban drawing rooms. With India responsible for a 4.1% share of global emissions, one can only hope that its ratification of the Paris Agreement on climate change, just weeks before the 22nd round of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change is set to take place in Marrekech, Morrocco, from 7-18 November, will lead to a sincere effort to fulfil its commitments towards its environment goals.
For the past couple of years, my family has often spoken of quitting Delhi, which holds the disreputable title of being one of the top 10 polluted cities in the world. With the monsoon receding and the return of a permanent haze of smog over the city, this thought once again flexes its muscle. But if we were to run, where would we run to? If not the permanently damaged lungs that cough their protest, would not the pesticide-ridden food continue to trouble us?
As we rush unconcerned towards what seems like self-wrought doom, is there nothing we can do?
***
A plastic-waste recycling plant in Meerut
A plastic-waste recycling plant in Meerut
In a conversation with author Amitav Ghosh this summer, when he published his book The Great Derangement: Climate Change And The Unthinkable, he responded to the idea of “being the change you want to see”, of individual actions that can make a difference, by saying: “Look, obviously people feel compelled to do something individually, but I think it’s very important not to capitulate to the view that individuals can solve this problem. It’s a collective problem; it’s a question of collective action; we’re talking about a global commons. This whole neo-liberal sort of push for the last 30-40 years has been towards trying to reduce everything towards individual actions and initiatives. In fact, it prevents the whole imagining of problems in terms that are amenable to collective action. In that sense, I would say that every time we meet this question of individual initiatives, we should just turn away from it; we should refuse to succumb to that logic. How are you or I, for example, going to solve the question of how much water is withdrawn from the Upper Ganga acquifer? We can’t.”
He’s correct, of course. And, as he points out, we no longer have the luxury of time.
However, it’s also a fact that the problems have come too close to home. However far removed concepts like Anthropocene or melting glaciers may seem, it’s impossible for any one of us to turn away from this toxic mess of our own making, affecting every aspect of our lives, from the food we eat to the air we breathe. Last winter, even as designer air masks started emerging in the Delhi market, a notification from my children’s school left me aghast. It recommended that we take the precaution of sending the children to school wearing air masks. I don’t know whether I was more horrified at this apparent panic on the part of the school authorities or the conditions that had led to it. What was this sci-fi existence? When it is the children at risk, naturally you agonize more.
***
An e-waste recycling plant in Haridwar. Photographs by Pradeep Gaur/Min
An e-waste recycling plant in Haridwar. Photographs by Pradeep Gaur/Min
So, what could I do?
I set myself the challenge of attempting to live in a way that would cause the least hurt to the environment. But considering the scale of the problem, this is an overwhelming question to consider. Did I even have the time among all the many things I was already juggling? Didn’t I need the support of my family too? Would I now need to expend energy trying to convince them? Organic food, LED bulbs, compost bins, menstrual cups—all these things that might bring a “difference” would make an immediate dent in my budget. In a city like Delhi that is so unsafe for women, walking the streets or using certain forms of public transport past a certain hour would only make me uneasy. In any case, would I make any difference at all? Where do I even begin?
But as I realized over just a few weeks, the mere act of being alert to my every action highlighted so many that are easily reversible. It is a process that can surprise you. Once you start, you begin to question every single thing—from the toothpaste with the antibacterial agent triclosan that you’re spitting down the drain and which is toxic to marine life, to the coffee in every disposable cup that you drink at your workspace. The volumes of paper towels that I use to dry my hand in the washroom—wouldn’t the air drier that nobody uses, or better still, a handkerchief brought from home, be better? Discarding the plastic stirrer used to dissolve sugar into my coffee or the thermocol plates to eat in, reducing the sheer wastage of paper used for printing, travelling with a bottle of water in order to avoid purchases of PET bottles, making my own reetha shampoo—all these were achievable fairly easily and without much fuss.
***There are several websites that I went to with quizzes that tell you the extent of your carbon footprint and how to reduce it. Some gave solutions from the simple and doable to the truly complicated. I laughed at the concept of eating local—the most local I could get, in my very neighbourhood in fact, were the crops grown on the Yamuna river’s toxic floodplains. I patted myself on the back for having started the move to LED bulbs; being the tyrant at my home, pouncing at all electricity switches that needed to be turned off; being a habitual bucket-bath person rather than a wasteful shower one; for having slowly started replacing all plastic dabbas in the kitchen with steel, glass and ceramic; for making the daily commute on the Metro rather than a private vehicle; or for even having already started to segregate waste at home. At the same time, I flinched at reports of the environmental impact of the meat we eat, but couldn’t bring myself to think of a diet free from it; or the diesel vehicle we have at home—and thankfully the unmanageable traffic situation has ensured that it stays parked most of the time—that we couldn’t afford to change at the moment.

The birth of her children, the conception even, was a turning point in her life. She questioned the need for frequent ultrasounds, the birthing process followed in hospitals, the necessity of vaccinations, even conventional wisdom on when one should stop breastfeeding babies. For the purposes of this story, we shall skip to a point when she decided to give her toddler watermelon juice in a bottle. The nipple remained stained red for days afterwards, bringing to the fore everything she’d been sensing for a while, but which had been more convenient to ignore. “What kind of world were we leaving behind for them? It scared me,” she says. She now grows organic vegetables and medicinal plants, both on the roof of her home, as well as with children in her school. Their experiments on the school grounds have been so successful that the excess vegetables are distributed to the children to take home, in the process making a small community of parents a little bit more aware of the poison on their dinner plates. In Waldorf schools, gardening usually starts from grade 3, she says, but at Ukti they decided to start off even earlier. “In a city like Delhi, we are so far removed (from the situation), nobody is aware or doing anything. The next generation has to be made aware,” she says.
My generation grew up with parents who lived a more sustainable life, if only because the choices so headily offered by our post-liberalized marketplace simply did not exist then. If I don’t know how to segregate my waste—the organic wet, the paper and plastic waste that can be recycled if kept dry, batteries and broken tubelights that make up toxic waste, and the non-recyclables like sanitary napkins and diapers that go into landfills—it’s because I have never seen anyone do it. Does anyone even know that according to government rules it is mandatory for every household and every office to segregate their waste? Or that brands and manufacturers of plastic packaging are obliged to set up a system take them back from consumers? I most certainly didn’t.
Deepak Sethi, the co-founder and chief executive officer of Pom Pom Recycling Pvt. Ltd, a waste management service in Delhi that buys your dry waste and sends it to authorized recycling plants, believes that the most important challenge where waste management is concerned is to create a behavioural change. From making it compulsory education in every class at school, to enforcing it strictly in each office so that employees start getting habituated to it and can replicate the example at their homes, from making an example of it at every government office that invites vast volumes of visitors, to creating a standardized design for different bins for different categories of waste that people would start identifying with—Sethi believes that every person needs to learn, and to be taught, to manage their waste by themselves. Pom Pom itself conducts frequent awareness workshops in schools.

If you go on to the website of Pom Pom or even Daily Dump, a design-based solution to waste that is based in Bengaluru, one notices an attempt to redefine the language used around waste—it’s wealth, it’s valuable, not dirty or garbage. In our country, where caste-defined roles are so entrenched in mindsets, we are comfortable with the sight of little children knee deep in municipal dumps sifting through the waste, but shun the idea of doing away with this indignity of labour or even saving resources by sorting the waste at source, at our own home.
Garden Estate, a residential society in Gurgaon, near Delhi, says it has reduced 55% of the waste (225kg per day) that was going into landfills by the simple act of introducing a community composting project. Keshav Chander Jaini, the resident who introduced the idea in the society, says that since February, when the composting began, they have managed to sell 3,000kg of compost. This has been picked up by Edible Routes, a consultancy service that guides people on growing organic vegetables in their own space, whether it’s a balcony, terrace or farm. While 20% of the waste from the society is now going into landfills, Jaini says they hope to take steps to reduce it further to 10%, besides taking the initiative to deal separately with e-waste, empower waste pickers, and other aspects.
The Garden Estate story is important. After all, as Poonam Bir Kasturi, founder of PBK Waste Solutions Pvt. Ltd, which runs Daily Dump, states, “This is the crisis of our times.” It’s a small initiative in a gated colony that shows it’s not impossible for India to replicate the example set by Austria in becoming a zero-landfill country.
How much have I achieved in this past month? Very, very little, I’m afraid. So much of my time has been spent battling excuses, struggling with my inhibitions. And yet, I know that I haven’t failed; every single day now, I notice new, and surprisingly small, ways to do things differently. The first step to change, as Zutshi reminds me, is to become aware; to realize the impact things have.
Once you start trying, she says, it’s unlikely to leave the people around you untouched. And I know for one that ever since we started discussing this story, my immediate neighbour at my workspace has started puzzling the Dunkin’ Donut staff in the building by thrusting his own mug towards them instead of accepting their disposable coffee cup. Of course, since it would then be unethical to accept their plastic stirrer, he’s been deprived of sugar in his coffee.
***
What the new waste management rules say
This year, the central government notified new rules for a more efficient waste management system. If followed in all sincerity, it could truly lead to a Swachh Bharat. However, for that to happen, there needs to first be a concerted awareness programme. Here are some key rules that you should pay attention to:
1. Source segregation of waste mandatory, whether at individual homes, gated communities or offices and institutions, in order to more efficiently reuse and recycle.
2. New townships and housing societies to develop in-house waste handling, as well as processing arrangement for biodegradable waste.
3. Producers, importers and brand owners of plastic and non-recyclable packaging and e-waste responsible for introducing a collect back system.
4. Increase thickness of plastic carry bags from 40 to 50 microns, thus increasing the cost by 20 %. The hope is to deter the distribution of free carry bags.
5. Phasing out the manufacture of all non-recyclable multilayered packaging within two years.
6. Every person responsible for organising an event in open space shall segregate and manage the waste.

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