About 23 per cent of child mortality in the country is caused by environmental degradation and diseases caused by poor water supply, sanitation and hygiene, a World Bank study has found.
The World Bank report, titled "Diagnostic Assessment of Select Environmental Challenges in India", also states that environmental degradation costs the country 5.7 per cent of its GDP but maintains that this can be reduced significantly.
"A significant portion of diseases caused by poor water supply, sanitation and hygiene is borne by children under 5. About 23 per cent of child mortality in the country could be attributed to environmental degradation," the report said.
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The report states that the annual cost of environemental degradation in India amounts to about Rs 3.75 Trillion (USD 80 billion) which is equivalent to 5.7 per cent of the country's GDP.
Muthukumara S Mani, lead author of the report, said this figure is reasonable in comparison to other developing countries. The report claims that India can make green growth by putting strategies to reduce environmental degradation at the "minimal cost of 0.02-0.04 per cent of the average annual GDP growth rate.
Mani said a developing country like India cannot afford to grow now and clean up later as this will not be environmentally sustainable in the long run. "You have to clean up as you grow," he said.