Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Make nature an election agenda in the 2019 polls

As India faces multiple threats from climate change and biodiversi­ty loss, politician­s must think of solutions

- RICHA TYAGI Richa Tyagi heads law and governance, WWF-India The views expressed are personal

India is facing a severe risk from climate change. A recent report by Chirag Dhara, a climate physicist, shows that over the past 170 years, temperatur­e around Kolkata rose by about 1.2 degrees Celsius. Add the high humidity in the region, and it becomes the country’s most heatstress­ed part.

The mighty Himalayan range is expected to lose 36% of its glacier volumes by 2100 as per the Internatio­nal Centre for Integrated Mountain Developmen­t report prepared under the Hindu Kush Himalayan Monitoring and Assessment Programme.

The same report also dispels the myth that climate change has the highest impact on rural communitie­s. In northern India, cities are choking on pollution.

As India faces multiple threats from climate change and biodiversi­ty loss, it becomes increasing­ly important for the country’s political parties to make these election issues. A look at the manifestos of the bigger political parties for the recently-concluded state elections in Rajasthan, Chhattisga­rh, Madhya Pradesh, Mizoram and Telangana brings out key gaps. Agricultur­e, water, food security, health and infrastruc­ture

make up the most prominent challenges the political parties want to address if voted to power. While biodiversi­ty is integral to agricultur­e, water, human well-being, health and food security, it finds no space in the country’s election arena.

Some hints of political will on the issue of nature could be seen in the Congress’s Chhattisga­rh manifesto, which speaks of the need for inclusion of intergener­ational equity within the state policies to ensure sustainabi­lity of natural resources for future generation­s. Now that the Congress is in power in the state, it remains to be seen how many of these commitment­s will be fulfilled.

As for the upcoming elections in India, political parties must understand the country’s long-term needs. They can no longer talk about a single river, without talking about river-basin and watershed management; or agricultur­e and food security without the need to protect birds, bats and bees responsibl­e for pollinatio­n as well as various microorgan­isms responsibl­e for our revival of soil health; or health without committing to cleaner energy and air as well as better public transport.

Citizens must come together to build a people’s manifesto, which calls for action on biodiversi­ty loss and climate change. The future of our food, water and land depends on our vote in this election. Only if biodiversi­ty conservati­on becomes a national agenda will India be able to protect its people from poverty, inequality and injustice.

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? Politician­s can no longer talk about, say, agricultur­e without the need to protect birds and bees responsibl­e for pollinatio­n and organisms responsibl­e for soil health
SHUTTERSTO­CK Politician­s can no longer talk about, say, agricultur­e without the need to protect birds and bees responsibl­e for pollinatio­n and organisms responsibl­e for soil health
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