Hindustan Times (East UP)

Delhi govt’s ‘green fellows’ to help combat air pollution

- Soumya Pillai soumya.pillai@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Delhi government has decided to hire young students and profession­als to become ‘green fellows’ under their ‘Green Delhi’ mission to assist the understaff­ed environmen­t and forest department­s in managing issues related to air pollution, water pollution and management of the Capital’s forest lands, said senior government officials on Saturday.

Senior officials said the fellowship programme by the environmen­t department aims at engaging the city’s youngsters in assisting the government in their mission to tackle environmen­tal concerns.

Under this programme, the government will engage three specialist­s, 10 fellows and 15 associate fellows for a period of four years to assist the city’s understaff­ed environmen­t and forest department­s in improving their research, on-ground presence and public engagement programmes related to environmen­t issues.

“The fellows will be assigned to work under senior officers (such as principal secretary, special secretary, director etc) or any other officer designated by the environmen­t minister and in coordinati­on with the environmen­t department, Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC), the green war room as well as other department­s,” a senior official from the environmen­t department said.

The environmen­t ministry official said the applicatio­ns for the fellowship programmes are in; the environmen­t department will now assess the merit of the applicants and recruit them ahead of the upcoming winter season.

Government officials also said while these fellows will assist the government in the upcoming months in better assessing the pollution sources in winter, they will eventually help the department undertake the muchawaite­d tree census, which has never been conducted in the city.

Residents from some localities in the city, such as south

Delhi’s Sarvodaya Enclave, Vasant Vihar and Greater Kailash, conducted their neighbourh­ood tree census but this was a private exercise.

While the Delhi government expressed its interest in conducting the tree census in the city in 2018 and engaged Dehradunba­sed Forest Research Institute for the task, the proposal never took off.

In 2015 too, the government planned a tree census after the high court observed that the city is not as green as official figures make it out to be.

In 2017, a few government agencies and civic bodies started a census and counted around 18 million trees. But the exercise could not be completed and was left midway as some agencies could not submit their data.

While Delhi environmen­t minister Gopal Rai refused to comment on the government’s plan to conduct a tree census, Reena Gupta, advisor to the Delhi government, told a news channel on October 20 that the ‘green fellows’ will assist in the task. “Of course, we want to do a tree census all over Delhi in all the colonies, but we do not have people in the forest department. Under this new programme..., we are hoping some of these will help us conduct the tree census,” Gupta told the news channel.

Experts also said that Delhi, which is grappling with the problem of air pollution, needs a comprehens­ive tree census to get a clear picture of where the city stands in terms of its green cover, which will also help agencies plan plantation drives better in the future.

C R Babu, professor emeritus at Delhi University’s Centre for Environmen­tal Management and Degraded Ecosystems, said the tree census could give an idea as to how prepared the city is when it comes to fighting pollution.

“The girth and the canopy details of trees will give us an idea as to how much carbon is trapped in these trees, how much dust they can trap and how much pollution they can mitigate, thereby helping the city focus its fight against pollution,” he said.

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