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2009/11/23
ENVIRONMENT OF INDIA
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ALL COMPETITIVE GURU
2009/11/23
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ENVIRONMENT OF INDIA
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ENVIRONMENT OF INDIA
Among India’s most pressing environmental problems are land
damage, water shortages, and air and water pollution. During
1985, deforestation, which, especially in the Himalaya watershed
areas, aggravates the danger of flooding, averaged 1,471 sq km
(568 sq mi) per year. India also lost 50% of its mangrove area
between 1963 and 1977. Despite three decades of flood-control
programs that had already cost an estimated $10 billion, floods
in 1980 alone claimed nearly 2,000 lives, killed tens of thousands
of cattle, and affected 55 million people on 11.3 million hectares
(28 million acres) of land. As of the mid-1990s, 60% of the land
where crops could be grown had been damaged by the grazing of
the nation’s 406 million head of livestock, deforestation, misuse
of agricultural chemicals, and salinization.
Due to uncontrolled dumping of chemical and industrial
waste, fertilizers and pesticides, 70% of the surface water in India
is polluted. The nation has 1,260 cu km of renewable water
resources, of which 92% is used for farming. Safe drinking water
is available to 95% of urban and 79% of rural dwellers. Air
pollution is most severe in urban centers, but even in rural areas,
the burning of wood, charcoal, and dung for fuel, coupled with
dust from wind erosion during the dry season, poses a significant
problem. Industrial air pollution threatens some of India’s
architectural treasures, including the Taj Mahal in Agra, part of
the exterior of which has been dulled and pitted by airborne
acids. In what was probably the worst industrial disaster of all
time, a noxious gas leak from a Union Carbide pesticide plant in
Bhopal, the capital of Madhya Pradesh, killed more than 1,500
people and injured tens of thousands of others in December
1985. In 1992 India had the world’s sixth-highest level of
industrial carbon dioxide emissions, which totaled 769 million
metric tons, a per capita level of 0.88 metric tons.
The environmental effects of intensive urbanization are evident
in all the major cities, although Calcutta—once a symbol of
urban blight—has been freed of cholera, and most of the city now
has water purification and sewer services. Analogous
improvements have been made in other leading cities under the
Central Scheme for Environmental Improvement in Slum Areas,
launched in 1972, which provided funds for sewers, community
baths and latrines, road paving, and other services. However, as
of the mid-1990s, only 21 of India’s 3,245 cities had effective
sewage treatment.
The National Committee on Environmental Planning and
Coordination was established in 1972 to investigate and propose
solutions to environmental problems resulting from continued
population growth and consequent economic development; in
1980, the Department of the Environment was created. The sixth
development plan (1979–84), which for the first time included a
section on environmental planning and coordination, gave the
planning commission veto power over development projects that
might damage the environment; this policy was sustained in the
seventh development plan (1985–90). The National
Environmental Engineering Research Institute has field center
areas throughout the country.
The Wildlife Act of 1972 prohibits killing of and commerce in
threatened animals. In 1985 there were 20 national parks and
more than 200 wildlife sanctuaries. As of 2001, 4.4% of India’s
total land area was protected. In addition to 75 species of
mammals, 73 types of birds are endangered, as are 785 plant
species. Endangered species in India include the lion-tailed
macaque, five species of langur, the Indus dolphin, wolf, Asiatic
wild dog, Malabar large-spotted civet, clouded leopard, Asiatic
lion, Indian tiger, leopard, snow leopard, cheetah, Asian elephant,
dugong, wild Asian ass, great Indian rhinoceros, Sumatran
rhinoceros, pygmy hog, swamp deer, Himalayan musk deer,
Kashmir stag or hangul, Asiatic buffalo, gaur, wild yak, whitewinged
wood duck, four species of pheasant, the crimson
tragopan, Siberian white crane, great Indian bustard, river
terrapin, marsh and estuarine crocodiles, gavial, and Indian
python. Although wardens are authorized to shoot poachers on
game reserves, poaching continues, with the Indian rhinoceros
(whose horn is renowned for its supposed aphrodisiac qualities)
an especially valuable prize.
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