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Environment

Autos go green, city air to get cleaner

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Deccan Chronicle 25.08.2009

Autos go green, city air to get cleaner

August 25th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Bengaluru, Aug. 24: Pollution levels in the city could go down with around 90 per cent of autorickshaws plying on Bengaluru’s roads being converted to run on LPG. The push for the change in fuel has come from the transport department which has been slowly but steadily promoting the use of the gas in the state as environment friendly, safe, and cost-effective.

Mandatory conversion of three-wheelers registered after April 1,1991 to bi-fuel mode (such as LPG and petrol) in a phased manner started in 2003 with the use of authorised LPG kits and fixed LPG cylinders.

“The four-stroke LPG autorickshaws cost Rs. 1.5 lakh. A subsidy of Rs 10, 000 is being given to those who own diesel autorickshaws over 14 years old to convert the vehicles to run on LPG. Now almost 75,000 autos run on LPG in the city,” says a senior transport official.

According to the officer, all city regional transport offices have completedly restricted the registration of diesel-run autorickshaws as they are largely responsible for the city’s noise and air pollution.

“Diesel-run three wheelers are Euro2 and are unauthorised. They cannot be registered in the city any more,” the officer explains.

The department is also being alert about the 35,000-odd autorickshaws that are running on unauthorised LPG kits and use detachable cylinders, to ensure that they follow safety standards.

The aggressive measures to replace diesel-run autorickshaws and to convert petrol-run three-wheelers to use LPG have earned the transport department appreciation. It recently received an award from the Indian Auto LPG coalition (IAC) for the effort it has made to promote use of environment-friendly fuel.

 

Sheila outlines plan for a green Delhi

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The Hindu - Delhi 19.08.2009

Sheila outlines plan for a green Delhi

Special Correspondent

Seeks special dedicated enforcement staff, high wall around the Ridge

Photo: V.V. Krishnan

When neighbours meet: Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit greets Haryana Environment Minister Kiran Choudhary at the national conference of Ministers of Environment and Forests in New Delhi on Tuesday.

NEW DELHI: Noting that the Delhi Government was facing difficulties in protecting the Ridge due to multiplicity of authority, Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit on Tuesday emphasised the need for a unified approach in dealing with the situation.

Speaking at the National Conference of Environment and Forest Ministers of States here, Ms. Dikshit underlined the need for having dedicated staff for enforcement of the Environment Protection Act, 1986, so that the provisions could be enforced properly.

The Chief Minister said her aim was to make Delhi one of the greenest Capitals of the world: “The Delhi Government is keen to expand the green cover from the existing 20 per cent to 30 per cent. Already the green area has increased from 36 sq. km. in 1998 to over 300 sq. km. now.”

Lauding the role of the Eco-Task Force in greening the Ridge area in Bhatti Mines, the Chief Minister said while this appeared to be an impossible task, the Force had made it possible.

“The protection of the Ridge area is a challenge in itself. It requires a unified approach as different agencies have been working without any coordination resulting in lukewarm response. The Delhi Government has decided to construct a high wall around the Ridge right from Pusa Road to Dhaula Kuan to overcome the problem of encroachment and accumulation of debris,” she said.

Stating that the design of the wall had been prepared by the New Delhi Municipal Council, she said, it was uniform all over. The Chief Minister also informed that nine new city forests would be developed in this financial year and with this the total number of such forests would go up to 41 in 2010.

Ms. Dikshit also sought a special dedicated staff to ensure implementation of the Environment Protection Act, 1986, since at present the basic enforcing agency -- the Delhi police -- has to be requested every time to make staff available for the work.

As for the Yamuna, she said, the river covers a distance of 22 km from Wazirabad Barrage to Okhla Barrage in Delhi and cleaning it was essential for reviving the Capital’s glory. Stating that the water quality of the river was being monitored at nine locations by the Delhi Pollution Control Committee along with the Central Pollution Control Board, she said the work for laying of interceptors had been awarded to Engineers India Ltd. which has submitted a project report and is likely to take up the work from October this year.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 August 2009 05:22
 

India's environmental situation alarming: PM

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Deccan Herald 18.08.2009

India's environmental situation alarming: PM
New Delhi, Aug 18 (IANS):

The ''multiple environmental crises that confront our country have created an alarming situation'' Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said here on Tuesday, while asking state governments to curtail pollution, clean rivers and fight climate change.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh with Union Minister of State for Environment and Forests (Independent charge) Jairam Ramesh at the inauguration of National Conference of Ministers of Environment and forests from States and UTs in New Delhi on Tuesday. PTIOpening a daylong conference of environment ministers from all state governments, Manmohan Singh said: "Climate change is threatening our ecosystems, water scarcity is becoming a way of life and pollution is endangering our health."

"We have to make fundamental choices about our lifestyles," the prime minister said, assuring his audience that the "challenges are not insurmountable".

Describing climate change as a "major global challenge", he said India was conscious of its "responsibility to present and future generations" and would ensure the "ecological sustainability of its development path".

Manmohan Singh sought the cooperation of all state governments to implement the eight missions that the centre has outlined under the National Action Plan on Climate Change.

He asked the assembled ministers to have state level action plans in concordance with the national plan.

The prime minister also called upon state governments to modernise their forest departments and to fill up vacant posts, pointing out that many states would now get huge funding for compensatory afforestation projects, as the Supreme Court has recently unfrozen over Rs.9,000 crore meant for this. The money was lying in escrow accounts for over seven years.

Welcoming the prime minister, Minister of State for Environment and Forests Jairam Ramesh said the first tranche of these funds, Rs.400 crore, had been transferred to 10 states Tuesday morning, and Rs.1,000 crore would be transferred "in the next few days".

Manmohan Singh underlined the "need to ensure that local communities benefit from forest conservation. Tribals have guarded our forests for centuries. Their wisdom and experience should be utilised for conservation rather than turning them into environmental refugees".

He said the Tribal Rights Act was the best way to guarantee these rights.

The prime minister expressed concern that rivers all over India were still being degraded.

He referred to the increased allocation in this year's national budget to clean rivers, and asked state pollution control boards to curtail release of industrial effluents into waterways, "which account for 25 percent of total pollution in rivers".

Manmohan Singh felt that India's mandatory environmental clearance rules had led to a "licence raj" and had become "a source of corruption". But he expressed confidence that the National Green Tribunal bill would change this by setting up an independent regulator. The bill was introduced in parliament during the last session.

"India's energy needs will increase sharply," the prime minister pointed out. "We have to ensure we meet this demand in an environment-friendly way." He sought more investments in green technologies and a boost to research and development in this field.
"Environmental degradation threatens our economic security and our well-being," Manmohan Singh warned the assembled ministers.

While welcoming the prime minister, Ramesh appealed for more money for river and lake conservation and to set up joint effluent treatment plants in industrial estates.

The minister referred to an anomaly in the rules, due to which states had to transfer the water cess they collected to the centre, which then sent 80 percent of the amount back to the states. It would make more sense for the state to simply send 20 percent of cess to the centre, he pointed out.

Ramesh also sought "special bonuses" for states that maintained their green cover, and wanted this institutionalised through the Finance Commission or the Planning Commission.

 


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