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Sunita Narain: 2006: The mirror to our future

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Sunita Narain New Delhi
The year 2006 will go down as environment's watershed year. This is not because this year we have had extraordinary success in environmental management; there was also no environmental disaster per se. This year must be remembered because the task of environmental management has come to be even more contested and even more challenged. Protests against environmental degradation have grown. But so have efforts to deny environmental concerns or to dilute regulations. This is partly because economic growth has become the single biggest obsession of the country. It is also because environmental institutions have not been up to the challenge of standing by their agenda. But it is mostly because we as a society have not internalised how environment can become the instrument of economic change.
 
Just recall the million mutinies over dam projects, forest degradation, mining, industrial pollution and real estate development. The fact is that these struggles for environment have come to be seen as the biggest impediments to quick and dirty growth in the country. Recall then how crucial regulations to protect the environment have been negated this year from provisions for environmental impact assessments to those for coastal zone regulation.
 
In this war for wealth, the weaknesses of the system are being optimised. We know that our institutions of governance are riddled with corruption, red-tape and debilitating inefficiency. It becomes easy to argue that their role must be minimised. It also becomes easy to insist that regulations must be removed or made "simple" meaning diluted. What is never said is that these institutions have been made corrupt and compromised by these same lobbies. It is also never said that the challenge is to strengthen regulation and oversight, not to emasculate it.
 
The fact is that people are fighting against projects not because they are anti-national or against development. They are fighting for their own survival. We know in this country, people live on the environment. They are fighting so that these desperately meagre and insufficient resources are not taken away. They know that if the environment degrades, their lives will be more impoverished; more impossible.
 
Their protest should make us think again of this development, which can make such poor people even poorer. The problem is that modern industrial growth requires resources of the region "" minerals, water or energy "" not people. It does not provide local employment or economic benefits. It only takes away from the local region. In this process, it displaces people; it degrades the land and water on which they survive. People know this. The votaries of growth-at-all-cost should also learn this.
 
The problem also is that when regulatory institutions are disabled, people have nowhere to go. They have no choice but to "insist" that their voice is heard and they will get more desperate and more aggressive to make sure this happens. This spirals out of control as neglect breeds violence and violence breeds more intolerance. 2006 has been bloody, but 2007 will see more strife, not less. This is not good for the environment. It is certainly bad for the country.
 
But it is not just that protest is misunderstood, the fact is that we have not understood environmental concerns. We understand how to exploit resources "" develop "" and we understand how to conserve resources "" protect. But we do not understand how we should use resources profitably and sustainably for the economic security of people.
 
As I said, 2006 is a mirror of what our future will be. Let's discuss how we can change the present in 2007.

 
 

Disclaimer: These are personal views of the writer. They do not necessarily reflect the opinion of www.business-standard.com or the Business Standard newspaper

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First Published: Jan 02 2007 | 12:00 AM IST

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