Khaleej Times

India’s ‘Diamond City’ finds ways to keep its sparkle

- Thin Lei Win

BANGKOK — With a booming trade in diamond cutting and textile manufactur­ing, the port city of Surat in India’s western state of Gujarat is a melting pot for migrants from across the country seeking work and business opportunit­ies.

Kamlesh Yagnik was one of them. In his early 30s, the Mumbai native moved to the “Diamond City”, as Surat is known locally because it handles 90 per cent of the world’s rough diamond cutting and polishing. In the two decades since, the engineer has set up a technology consultanc­y and a clean energy management firm, raised a family, and come to regard Surat as home.

Now he is the city’s first chief resilience officer, tasked with making the industrial hub “cohesive, robust and sustainabl­e”. It will not be an easy task. Surat, home to nearly six million people, is one of the world’s fastestgro­wing cities. Up to the 1960s, it occupied 8.2 sqkm of land on the bank of the Tapi River. By 2009, it had expanded to 326.5 sqkm.

It has a limited public transport system and insufficie­nt affordable housing for the throngs of people that continue to arrive, betting their future on the city.

The Tapi River is the city’s main water source but its quality is deteriorat­ing. Surat also faces the threat of sea-level rise, while flooding and saltwater intrusion are already a problem. Meanwhile the industries that made Surat’s name could lead to its undoing, experts warn.

“This city is thriving, and it’s only because of the growth of diamonds and textiles,” Yagnik told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview.

But the raw materials are not produced in India — with much of Surat’s diamond supply coming from Africa — and that makes the city highly vulnerable to outside shocks, he emphasised.

“Economic resilience is a prime pillar for us,” said the former head of the Southern Gujarat Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Two weeks ago, Surat unveiled a document outlining how to achieve its vision of “healthy, just, economical­ly viable and environmen­tally sound” communitie­s.

The strategy explores how the city can diversify its economy, to bolster it against any downturn in diamonds and textiles, by developing policies to support its IT industry, promoting smaller businesses, and providing skills training.

The strategy was developed under the Rockefelle­r Foundation’s 100 Resilient Cities (100RC) initiative, which helps cities around the world prepare for climate change and other pressures. Surat is the first Indian city to publish its strategy, which Yagnik hopes will serve as a model for others, including three — Chennai, Pune and Jaipur — in the 100RC network.

The strategy, which took 18 months to complete, identifies seven key areas for action: connectivi­ty and mobility, affordable housing, water availabili­ty and quality,

This city is thriving, and it’s only because of the growth of diamonds and textiles Kamlesh Yagnik, Chief resilience officer of Surat

employment, environmen­t and ecosystems, social cohesion and public health.

These are broken down into 63 projects — more than half new — that last from one to eight years each, aimed at making Surat more resilient to environmen­tal, economic and social stresses.

They range from developing an integrated transport system to adapting buildings for low energy consumptio­n and providing housing insurance and soft loans to encourage home ownership.

There are also programmes to promote recycling, research groundwate­r, and design heritage walks for locals and tourists.

In the short term, Yagnik is hoping to make progress on monitoring the Tapi River’s water quality and developing non-motorised transport in areas with particular­ly bad traffic.

 ?? AFP ?? Partially-cut and polished diamonds at a processing centre in Surat. The Indian port city handles 90 per cent of the world’s rough diamond cutting and polishing. —
AFP Partially-cut and polished diamonds at a processing centre in Surat. The Indian port city handles 90 per cent of the world’s rough diamond cutting and polishing. —

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