The Free Press Journal

Climate change threat is real, Aaditya Thackeray tells students

- STAFF REPORTER

Thackeray said that the government was focused on developing Mumbai as a financial lead city

Climate change is real and it is important for us to look around and understand that this would not be sustainabl­e for long

Maharashtr­a minister Aaditya Thackeray has said that the threat of climate change is a real one and that developmen­t and environmen­t can go hand in hand provided that the developmen­t is sustainabl­e.

Thackeray, who is Minister for Environmen­t and Climate Change, was interactin­g with students at an event on climate, culture, commerce,

– AADITYA THACKERAY, Environmen­t and Climate Change

connectivi­ty and the future course for Mumbai as a part of Colaba Conversati­on 2021 organised by Observer Research Foundation (ORF) on Wednesday.

Referring to the unseasonal rains in December in parts of Maharashtr­a, Thackeray said, "Climate change is real and it is important for us to look around and understand that this would not be sustainabl­e for long." He said it was important to understand that while one could enjoy a cold rainy morning in the city, it was also crucial to realise that on stepping out of city life, is it good for the farmers, is it good for the food we get, is it sustainabl­e as a lifestyle for the people, from planning city infrastruc­ture.

"All of this happens according to the seasons. Most of our agrarian produce, most of our GDP is dependent on the monsoons. But when monsoons start becoming erratic how does one depend on it? Because if it is raining in December and January, will it be back again in June? Have the agricultur­al and sowing seasons changed? So all of this is really in climate change," the minister said.

Thackeray said that the government was focused on developing Mumbai as a financial lead city, one which was on its way to gradually become central to India's rise in the Indian Ocean and beyond.

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