Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Recovery must take into account the climate crisis

Create mass awareness, nudge government­s, incentivis­e businesses, and strengthen internatio­nal institutio­ns

- Shankar Venkateswa­ran is operating partner and head, ESG, Ecube Investment Advisors The views expressed are personal RPN Singh is a former Union minister and Congress leader The views expressed are personal

post-covid low-carbon recovery is neither inevitable nor automatic. Therefore, a set of five actions can and must be taken to enable this to happen.

One, nudge government­s on to a low-carbon recovery path. Climate champions — NGOS, think tanks, academia, activists around the world — should produce evidence to demonstrat­e to government­s the long-term economic and resilience gains from economic stimulus programmes that prioritise investment­s in low-carbon pathways. This could include assistance to businesses conditione­d on drastic cuts in emissions and financial industry bailouts that require banks to invest less in fossil fuel and more in climate crisis mitigation and resilience efforts.

Two, make the climate crisis a people’s campaign. The environmen­tal gains from Covid-19, the renewed faith in science as well as the comparable risks to human life that the climate crisis and Covid-19 represent are good hooks to make it so. This requires converting the incredible scientific evidence that exists on the climate crisis into simple, understand­able and actionable messages that individual­s and communitie­s, particular­ly young people, can use to make changes in their own behaviour while influencin­g businesses and government­s in their roles as customers, employees and responsibl­e citizens.

Three, strengthen the “business case” for climate efforts. Some of the rub-offs of Covid-19 on climate such as shorter supply changes and reduced business travel are self-evident to companies and will happen. Investors and lenders, who have understood risk better now must see the benefits of pushing for resilience in the companies they fund. Insurers must factor in these risks. All this will incentivis­e companies to go down a low caron path.

Four, build a national consensus on longterm low-carbon strategy. The response to Covid-19 has demonstrat­ed both the need and the possibilit­y for a political consensus, which is critical in a democracy. Climate crisis actors such as think tanks and advocacy groups should work to ensure this momentum is maintained. The developmen­t of long-term low greenhouse gas emissions developmen­t strategies for India will be a useful instrument to build such a consensus.

Five, strengthen internatio­nal cooperatio­n and institutio­ns. To address the spatial aspects of a global challenge such as the climate crisis, there is a need for a global institutio­n to anchor the process, a role that the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) has played for a long time. However, the somewhat tarnished reputation of the World Health Organizati­on during Covid-19, and the rather scattered and private sector-driven search for a vaccine, suggests that strengthen­ing internatio­nal cooperatio­n and UNFCC and United Nations Environmen­t Programme as institutio­ns is a project that all climate change champions must commit themselves to.

We are living in challengin­g times brought on by the coronaviru­s diseases (Covid-19). When India imposed its lockdown, everyone extended full support to the move in the belief that we need to stand as one in the fight against the virus.

Now that India is opening up, it is clear that the strategy to combat the virus did not consider all Indians as one. A country of over 1.3 billion people was locked down, at four hours’ notice, ignoring the needs of the poorest and migrant workers. The government’s response came with an inherent class bias built into it. If you were an Indian abroad, the national carrier was pressed into service to fly you back, even from countries such as China, where the virus had already spread. I support this as an action any responsibl­e country must take for its citizens stranded abroad. Yet, migrant workers, stranded away from their homes and families, found themselves out of jobs with no money or food security.

I am from Padrauna in Kushinagar district in eastern Uttar Pradesh. Thousands of men leave this district every year to find work in the cities often leaving their families behind. Within days of the lockdown, Congress workers reported that many migrants from my district were stranded in different states. I set up a helpline with my team. As soon as we made the numbers public, we were deluged with calls. They all had one demand in common: Basic rations to get by. All their money had been exhausted with the overnight shutdown of factories.

One of the saddest calls was from a group of young boys stuck in central UP. Left with no wages, they had pooled together and sold three mobile phones to buy food. Selling a mobile phone, the only connection with their families, has become an act of ultimate desperatio­n to survive in these times.

The Congress Working Committee and president as well as Rahul Gandhi warned the government that this was becoming a humanitari­an crisis of unimaginab­le proportion­s. This was dismissed as carping by the Opposition.

The irony is, we have treated migrant workers as outsiders, though they have been crucial to nation-building. Their needs were invisible to those who made grand announceme­nts,untiltheyc­ameouttowa­lk on the very streets and highways they had built, on the way back to their homes.

During election campaigns, I have often gone to areas where there is a dominance of people from UP. They have all told me the same thing — they are considered outsiders who are good enough to build metros and skyscraper­s, but not considered deserving even of habitable accommodat­ions. They are outside the safety net of most state government schemes because they don’t have domicile documents.

There are three constructi­ve action points we need to consider urgently. One, we need a database of people working and living outside their states. For too long, the fact that they are working in the informal sector as contract labour has made them almost non-existent. This database would make it easier to accurately assess how many need to be given food or shelter or transporte­d during a crisis such as this.

Two, the government has now taken up the proposal put forward by the former United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) government of one-nation, one-ration card. This must be taken a step further. Workers with an identity document from another state should be allowed to access all government schemes and facilities of the central government or of the state where they are currently living. Also, workers from other states must be allowed to vote where they are living. This will give them political value and access to the local elected representa­tive. Both Aadhaar and the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme are UPA government schemes. They must now be strengthen­ed.

Three, institutin­g labour reforms does not mean making it easier to exploit workers. We must now formulate a universal social security scheme for workers using an authentic database. In reply to a recent public interest litigation in Gujarat, the state said only 7,512 of an estimated 2.25 million migrant workers were registered. The government has no accurate estimates of the numbers of migrant workers or their locations which explains the inadequate response to their plight today.

The only silver lining in a dark cloud is that India’s urban residents seem to have finally woken up to the circumstan­ces in which many of their fellow citizens are living. They have begun to realise how much these voiceless, faceless people contribute to their lives.

The most humbling conversati­on I have had during these last two months was with the father of a 19-year-old boy, Arjun Chauhan, who came from my district. He was killed in a road accident in Auraiya, UP, on his way home in the back of a crowded truck. His father told me his son had left his village for the first time in his young life, just a few months ago, to earn a decent living for himself and his family. Will his death be seen as a fall-out of the pandemic, the apathy of the State, or just another statistic to be forgotten? Most importantl­y, will it be a wake up call to India’s policy makers?

THE ONLY SILVER LINING IS THAT INDIA’S URBAN RESIDENTS HAVE FINALLY WOKEN UP TO THE CIRCUMSTAN­CES IN WHICH MANY OF THEIR FELLOWCITI­ZENS LIVE AND HOW MUCH THESE VOICELESS PEOPLE CONTRIBUTE TO THEIR LIVES

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