Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Designing a blueprint for clean air

Strengthen the legislativ­e mandate, and suitably enhance the institutio­nal capacity to discharge it

- NAVR ROZ DUBA AS SHIB BA GHOS S

North India’s air pollution problem is predictabl­y bad. After the October-november spike driven in part (but only in part) by crop burning, we have the December second, somewhat lower, spike driven (again in part) by biomass burning and the trapping of smog by cold air. December should remind us that we need to pay attention to air pollution all year round.

There are those that argue for dramatic institutio­nal change: Empower an air pollution czar at the Prime Minister’s Office, create a new agency, and so on. These silver bullet solutions are unlikely to work. We cannot wish away the fact that limiting air pollution creates winners and losers, and that losers will justifiabl­y protest. Nor can we ignore India’s weak implementa­tion and enforcemen­t capacity, and the sheer scale and scope of the problem. To rise to the challenge, we need to build a long-term institutio­nal machinery explicitly designed to address this complex problem. This machinery needs to be multi-pronged to address all the sources, not just those that grab headlines, and have enhanced capacities for sustained implementa­tion rather than knee-jerk reactions.

Fortunatel­y, there are signs that public and political attention to the air pollution problem is rising, and may be able to power such sustained action. A recent Lokniti-csds survey suggests that air quality is one of the most pressing issues in the minds of Delhi voters. Politician­s are beginning to listen. This winter, Parliament witnessed 12 hours of discussion on air pollution. A private member’s bill tabled in the Rajya Sabha aims to provide every citizen with a right to breathe clean air. Another bill being discussed will shift the focus of the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981, to public health impacts of air pollution, and urge transparen­cy in, and accountabi­lity of, regulators.

How do we harness this welcome attention and focus on action? Two crucial ingredient­s are strengthen­ing the legislativ­e mandate, and significan­tly enhancing the institutio­nal capacity to discharge this mandate.

A good starting point is to amend the air Act to introduce three changes.

First, enable enforcemen­t proceeding­s to be based on emerging sources of data on emissions, like Continuous Emission Monitoring Systems, instead of manual inspection­s alone, as is currently the case. This seemingly arcane issue is fundamenta­l to the enforcemen­t challenge. Right now, legal action against polluters requires data from a physical sample that is easily cheated by adjusting the timing of emissions or dodging inspectors. Enabling our regulators with modern technology would dramatical­ly increase the potential for credible enforcemen­t.

Second, to realise the full benefits of enforcemen­t data, the enforcemen­t toolbox of the State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBS) needs to be strengthen­ed. Currently, they can only rely on criminal prosecutio­n, which is expensive and time-consuming, or shutting down operations, which hurts labour, and understand­ably leads to political blowback. Instead, our regulators should statutoril­y be empowered to escalate regulatory action in an incrementa­l fashion, for example by tools such as forfeiture of bank guarantees deposited by regulated entities and charging environmen­tal compensati­on for environmen­tal damage.

Third, legislativ­e action can enhance the will to use these tools, by strengthen­ing the internal governance of the SPCBS. Instead of being packed with government officials and potential polluters such as municipal corporatio­ns, the governing board should also include voices representi­ng air pollution victims, such as independen­t experts, civil society representa­tives, and health profession­als. Moreover, the minimum statutory qualificat­ions for the chairperso­ns and member secretarie­s should be enhanced to reflect the nature of duties and scale of problems.

Since laws are only as strong as the agencies that implement them, the SPCBS themselves need institutio­nal strengthen­ing.

First, all SPCBS should fill existing vacancies with competent staff, and assess the adequacy of their current sanctioned strength and its expertise. To put this in perspectiv­e, Punjab and Haryana PCBS have about 30% vacancies.

Second, measures should be put in place to deter state government­s from interferin­g in SPCB functionin­g. For instance, the SPCBS should have financial autonomy and their leadership should have a fixed tenure free of unreasonab­le transfer orders. Finally, although SPCBS have substantia­l unused powers, such as laying down standards for new sources of pollution and pollutants in consultati­on with the Central Pollution Control Board. Here, civil society knowledge and pressure can be important in encouragin­g a more proactive approach.

While SPCBS are the frontline regulators for pollution control, the larger ecosystem of institutio­ns within which they function also needs strengthen­ing, and systems of coordinati­on across agencies need to be enhanced. For instance, vehicular emissions are governed primarily by the transport department and traffic police, while dust and waste management are under the municipal corporatio­ns.

Air pollution is an urgent problem. But urgency should not translate to haste or a search for ineffectiv­e silver bullets. There are well-known, and problemati­c, bottleneck­s in the way of improved air quality. Concrete legislativ­e and institutio­nal changes are necessary to release these bottleneck­s. We should harness the upsurge in public and political interest to make these changes.

 ??  ?? Air pollution is an urgent problem. But urgency should not translate to haste or a search for ineffectiv­e silver bullets
YOGENDRA KUMAR/HT PHOTO
Air pollution is an urgent problem. But urgency should not translate to haste or a search for ineffectiv­e silver bullets YOGENDRA KUMAR/HT PHOTO
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