Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Developmen­t and environmen­t safety needn’t be in conflict

- AYAZ MEMON

ACCORDING TO SAFAR, THE AIR QUALITY INDEX IN MAZAGAON ON WEDNESDAY MORNING WAS SEVERELY BAD AT 432, BUT STILL MUCH HIGHER THAN NORMAL

Reports in Thursday’s newspapers highlighti­ng serious pollution levels in Mazagaon — as recorded by the System of Air Quality Forecastin­g and Research (SAFAR) — had a few of us old school friends calling each other in nostalgia-laden concern.

We had all studied at St Peter’s High School, adjoining the bus depot, and bang opposite the Sales Tax office. Behind the school was Mazagaon Hill from where, on a good day, one could see the Ferry Wharf (Bhaucha Dhakka now), leading into the sea.

Not far from our alma mater was Matherpaca­dy Village, one of the designated heritage precincts of Mumbai where Roman Catholic East Indians lived almost cheek by jowl in houses of distinctiv­e and quaint architectu­re. Beyond Matherpaca­dy, the road leading to Mustafa (or Lakda/timber) Bazar, was dotted with buildings housing Ismaili Khojas, with a masjid as the community hub.

On the left of St Peter’s, the road led towards Dongri, with settlement­s of Maharashtr­ians gradually blurring into the Muslim-dominated area that then extends all the way to Crawford Market.

My favourite stretch was from school towards Byculla, past the Mazagaon Court, St Mary’s School and the Aga Khan residentia­l conclave and hospital opposite it.

The promenade used to be thick with trees, leafy and shady, with colonies of Christians interspers­ing the residences of other mixed communitie­s, defining Mazagaon’s cosmopolit­an ethos.

These made for wonderful reminisces for the old schoolboys club as it were, but soon led to the agonising present, which had provoked the phone calls — the fall in air quality at Mazagaon.

According to SAFAR, the Air Quality Index (AQI) in this area on Wednesday morning was severely bad at 432, improving to 401 by evening, but still desperatel­y higher than normal, which is less than 100.

While it’s been 45 years since we passed out, could things have gotten so bad in this part of the city that people had to be warned about outdoor physical activity?

The thing about trips down memory lane is that the past is always seen through rosetinted glasses. Everything about Mazagaon in the 1960s till the early 70s (when we were in school) seemed perfect, which perhaps is not quite as it was.

Even then, the trucks plying on P D’mello Road, which runs from Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Terminus (CSMT) all the way to Wadala and onward to the eastern suburbs, would spew noxious fumes that one could smell sitting in the classrooms.

By the time we finished school, Mazagaon, like much of the city, was being transforme­d by redevelopm­ent. This has only increased in the past four decades, changing not just the topography of the city, but also the quality of air, compounded by the rise in vehicular traffic.

On careful scrutiny of the SAFAR report, one learns that while Mazagaon was under duress currently, it was largely due to constructi­on activity. The quality of air would improve once this stops or at least dust and other particles that can cause harm are better managed.

But here’s the rub. While Mazagaon’s air quality will get better with precaution­s, it is still symptomati­c of the overall poor air that we breathe in Mumbai.

For instance, going by SAFAR’S findings, the AQI in Andheri-malad on Wednesday evening was between 301400 (very poor) and in south Mumbai, 237 (poor). SAFAR also put Navi Mumbai’s AQI at 93, which is still not ₹good’, but at least the satellite city is the least polluted, showing what proper planning and planting abundant trees can achieve.

The good thing today, unlike in the past, is that there are agencies that use scientific methods to capture and process data, which can highlight problems.

The unfortunat­e thing is that such informatio­n is still not given the importance it deserves.

There is no conflict, as widely imagined, between developmen­t and the safe keep of the environmen­t, if an intelligen­t balance is maintained. But there will be if the latter is ignored, as seems to be the unfortunat­e pattern.

Modern-day sociologis­ts/ scientists/culturalis­ts/philosophe­rs et al, see fake news and environmen­tal degradatio­n as the two biggest threats to modern civilisati­on. I venture the latter is more serious.

We may still survive the former but the latter could wipe out the planet itself.

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