Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

India disregards scientific opinion on environmen­t

Involving concerned citizens in the environmen­tal decisionma­king process will have farreachin­g effects

- KANCHI KOHLI MANJU MENON General Bikram Singh is the former Chief of Army Staff. The views expressed are personal Manju Menon and Kanchi Kohli are environmen­tal researcher­s at Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi The views expressed are personal

Floods have become a recurrent form of disasters in India. As has been stated after every such event, there is little that is “natural” about these terrible occurrence­s. Compromise­d decision-making on developmen­t and infrastruc­ture projects have already wrecked the lives of rural and forest dwelling people. Mining and industries pollute their water sources and farmlands and prohibit their access to forests. Increasing­ly, environmen­tal crises in urban areas remind us that disaster geographie­s are no longer distant from us.

There are two ways in which citizens have been rendered vulnerable to bad developmen­t planning and decisions of government­s.

Environmen­tal decision-making processes for developmen­t projects are supposed to use the best available scientific knowledge to ensure that developmen­t does not lead to negative impacts or that they can at least be recognised and mitigated. But India’s Environmen­tal Impact Assessment (EIA) process rewards bad science. For example, the EIA reports for the approved “redevelopm­ent” projects in Delhi used plagiarise­d informatio­n and old baseline data. A city that is reeling under air pollution, water crisis and overburden­ed landfills deserved, at the very least, a detailed scrutiny of impacts before decisions were taken. Instead, the most crucial analyses related to traffic, air and water are missing.

Indian EIAs are never peer reviewed. EIA procedures are so corrupted by project interests that reputable scientists almost never agree to be on the Expert Appraisal Committees (EAC) after one experience. The few who do, wage lonely battles through their tenures and may never be reinstated. Several ex-EAC members have written or spoken openly about these problems but the system has hardly changed. In the 1990s, EAC committees used to have eminent environmen­talists in them. Now they are dominated by ex-bureaucrat­s and institutio­nal experts who are vulnerable to being armtwisted by the government.

In several instances, courts have also missed calling out dodgy scientific reports that have justified high impact projects. Back in 2010, when the Commonweal­th Games (CWG) village was to be built in Delhi, NEERI, a premier government institutio­n, submitted a report stating that the site of this real estate project was neither a riverbed nor the floodplain­s of the river Yamuna. While the high court set up a committee for further investigat­ion, the apex court overturned the lower court’s observatio­n that the project had “disregarde­d and ignored material scientific literature and the opinion of experts and scientific bodies”. The CWG village was built but only to witness floods swell up around it, risking the entire constructi­on just days before the games were to begin.

Involving affected people and concerned citizens in environmen­tal decision-making is a simple idea with far reaching effects. Normativel­y, it only allows for democratis­ing environmen­tal governance. It also recognises that the causes of environmen­tal crises are complex and knowable only to a limited extent to trained experts. Participat­ory processes give opportunit­ies to gather particular place and livelihood-based knowledge of people to understand and plan for unforseen effects that land use change and other transforma­tions may bring.

In 2009, the Delhi High Court in Utkarsh Mandal v/s Union of India upheld that it is the duty of the EACs to consider the merits of the objections raised at the public hearings. Not doing that would amount to “nonapplica­tion of mind to relevant materials and therefore arbitrary.” But this forum is seen as an inconvenie­nce and as a roadblock by project developers.

In the coastal areas of Kerala and Goa, fishing communitie­s have come in thousands to participat­e in hearings. When they have overwhelmi­ngly opposed projects on the basis of climate change, land grabbing and loss of ecology, these hearings have labelled as partisan by the government­s and regulators. In the midst of news of the ongoing environmen­tal disasters and stories of human courage and resilience, it is important to remember that compromise­d decision-making and government faith in project proponents rather than the public have made us all defenceles­s against the perils of developmen­t.

INDIAN ENVIRONMEN­TAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT­S ARE NEVER PEER REVIEWED. THE PROCEDURES ARE CORRUPTED BY PROJECT INTERESTS, REPELLING REPUTABLE SCIENTISTS FOREVER

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