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    KIIWEnviron Oct 1 to 12

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    Content

    As Hudhud approaches, coastal people move to safer areas 1

    From Phailin to Hudhud: a year of extreme weather events 1

    World Bank to lend Sri Lanka US $100 million for building climate res 2

    Farmers in Burkina Faso give smart answer to climate change 2

    May 2015 is deadline for draft climate agreement: UN 3

    Chile becomes first South American country to enforce carbon tax 3

    The fight for equity 4

    Modi forges climate ties with Obama 7

    World growth 'unsustainable', warns US-based group of museums 9

    Tibetan plateau becomes focus of intense climate study 9

    Wrong climate in India 10

    Oceans report card: Global ocean health scores 67 out of 100 10

    Oceanic turtles face cancer risk due to water pollution, says study 11

    Where have all the water bodies gone? 11

    World falling behind 2020 plan for nature protection: U.N. report 13

    Perspectives on ocean mixing 14

    World waking up to wind, solar energy: study 14

    Welcome push to solar power 15

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    Innovation key to meet Aichi biodiversity targets by 2020 15

    An unsustainable course 17

    Typhoon Phanfone batters Japan 18

    India might agree to discuss HFCs under Montreal Protocol 18

    Singapore shrouded in Indonesian haze 19

    Earth Overshoot Day 19

    Kalam stresses need for carbon-free cities 20

    Power Ministry Initiates Several Measures for Promoting Energy Efficiency i 20

    Green-rated buildings not keeping their promise, says CSE report 21

    Gujarat to host India's first offshore wind power project 22

    Air pollution responsible for decline in monsoon rains in last 50 yea 22

    Panel invites consultations on review of green laws 23

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    As Hudhud approaches, coastal people move to safer areas Thu, Oct 9, 2014environment, cyclone, Down to Earth, Hudhud,

    A large number of coastal villages in Odisha that were hit by cyclone Phailin last

    October [2] are yet to recover from its impact when another cyclone, Hudhud, has

    come a knocking.

    Many of those affected by Phailin still haven't enough food, safe drinking water and

    a means to make a living. They also lack adequate shelter and face a fresh risk of their

    homes being washed away in the cyclone,

    Heavy casualty was avoided during Phailin because of effective evacuation operations

    in the coastal areas of Odisha and Andhra Pradesh.

    From Phailin to Hudhud: a year of extreme weather eventsSat, Oct 11, 2014environment, cyclone, Down to Earth, Phailin, Hudhud,

    Since October 2013, when Phailin hit Odisha's coast and left a trail of destruction,

    India has witnessed a series of extreme weather events like cyclonic storms, cloudburst,

    floods, droughts and hailstorms.

    Though cyclone Phailin did not claim many lives, it left behind a trail of destruction

    that severely crippled people's livelihood. The storm was followed by Lehar, a cyclonic

    storm initially predicted to be a very severe storm and later transformed into a deep

    depression.

    Year 2014 began with the occurrence of polar vortex, a phenomenon that brought

    unusual chill to North America and Europe. The weather event did not leave India

    untouched. The country experienced hailstorms because of the unusual movement of

    cold westerly winds that came from the north and caused snowfall over the Himalayan

    region in January, putting an end to farmers' dream of a good harvest in Maharashtra.

    While many farmers were yet to count the losses, another demon in the form of delayed

    and deficit monsoon knocked the doors of farmers across India.

    In September, Jammu and Kashmir witnessed one of its worst ever floods. It claimed

    about 300 lives and economic losses have been pegged at about Rs 5,000 crore. Along

    with Kashmir, northeastern states in the country also battled floods in the same month.

    The latest in the series of extreme weather events is the Hudhud cyclone which is

    heading towards the east coast of Andhra Pradesh and Odisha.

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    World Bank to lend Sri Lanka US $100 million for building climate res Mon, Oct 6, 2014environment, Down to Earth, sri lanka, climate change,

    The island nation has also signed an agreement for a loan of up to US $102 million incase of a natural disaster is declared an emergency

    The World Bank has committed a US $90 million loan to Sri Lanka Climate Resilience

    Programme to increase its risk resilience. The programme is a four-year project that

    aims to address the issue of climate change by building resilience of vulnerable population

    to adapt and improve government capacity to disaster response.

    Another US $13 million will be pumped in for nine river basins to develop flood and

    drought protection methods.

    The island nation has also signed an agreement for an emergency loan of up to US $102

    million in case of a natural disaster is declared as a national emergency.

    According to World Bank estimates, the floods in 2010-2011 caused a damage of a

    billion dollars in the country. Moreover, the country risks US $ 380 million a year in

    damages from natural disasters. Parts of the country are presently facing a drought

    which has resulted in 40 per cent crop losses in the affected areas.

    Farmers in Burkina Faso give smart answer to climate change Fri, Oct 10, 2014environment, Burkina Faso, Down to Earth, climate change,

    The farmers in Burkina Faso have been quietly fighting climate change. Over the past

    three decades, the poorest farmers in the West African country produced food for half

    a million people by restoring some 300,000 hectares of degraded land with innovative

    techniques,

    Landlocked Burkina Faso, which ranks 181 out of 187 countries in the United Nations

    Human Development Index, remains one of the world's poorest nations. "The reclamation

    of unproductive lands in such a climatically vulnerable region by resource-constrained

    farmers is an achievement by any standards,

    One of the sustainable techniques employed by the farmers includes ditches to collectwater. It is important to ensure that these practices are implemented within communities

    instead of just being introduced to individual farmers. There must be discussions with

    farmers from the ground level, instead of visiting organisations simply imposing their

    ideas

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    The fight for equity Sat, Oct 11, 2014Copenhagen , BRICS, environment, Frontline, climate change,

    IN December 2015, the world will know which way it is headed in terms of climate

    change and what the fate of the earth will be, particularly humanity, in the years beyond

    2050. The year marks the deadline that was set in 2011 at the 17th climate summit in

    Durban, under what is known as the Durban Platform, for the world community to

    arrive at a binding international agreement on limiting carbon emissions so that the

    average global surface temperature does not overshoot the "guard rail" of 2deg Celsius--or

    even a more ambitious limit of 1.5deg C--above pre-industrial levels. The annual climate

    summits are called the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework

    Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which was negotiated in 1992 at the Earth

    Summit in Rio de Janeiro. The convention's stated objective (Article 2) is "stabilisation

    of greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would stopdangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system".

    Equity is an important principle, indeed the cornerstone, of the UNFCCC, which is

    articulated (Article 3.1) as: "The parties should protect the climate system for the benefit

    of present and future generations of humankind, on the basis of equity and in accordance

    with their common but differentiated responsibilities (CBDR) and respective capabilities"

    (emphasis added).

    Every country has an additional common climate obligation towards emission reductions

    individually, but these responsibilities would be differentiated according to their historical

    actions, respective current capacities and capabilities.

    According to the latest (Fifth) Assessment Report (AR5) of the Intergovernmental Panel

    on Climate Change (IPCC), the increase in temperature between 1880 and 2012 is

    already 0.85deg C

    At COP-15 in Copenhagen in 2009, the participating countries, after failing to conclude

    a legally binding treaty in accordance with the UNFCCC principles, pledged to work

    towards an agreement that would prevent global warming from exceeding 2deg C. The

    crucial COP-21, expected to herald the making or breaking of a climate resilient world,

    will be held in Paris. At COP-20, to be held in Lima in December 2014, it is widely

    expected that the nature of the emergent universal agreement should become clear. A

    draft text is expected to be tabled for discussions at the summit.

    The nature of the legal agreement was left pretty much vague at the Durban summit.

    The Durban decision was that it could be a protocol, another legal instrument or "an

    agreed outcome with legal force". The phrase "an agreed outcome with legal force",

    whose meaning is not quite clear, was incorporated after prolonged wrangling as a

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    compromise to India for which the use of the words "legally binding" in the earlier

    formulation was anathema to its negotiating position. In the past 22 years of climate

    negotiations, two approaches to address the impending climate crisis have emerged.

    The first was the Kyoto Protocol of 2005, a top-down (prescriptive) solution whose

    architecture reflected the CBDR. The Kyoto Protocol now stands virtually dismantled.In accordance with the respective historical responsibilities, it required only the developed

    or Annex 1 countries to take on assigned targets for emission reductions over their 1990

    levels based on the simple "polluter pays" principle. Their carbon emissions since

    industrialisation began in the mid-19th century account for about 70 per cent of the

    accumulated carbon in the atmosphere (stock), constituting the major cause for the

    current global warming and climate change.

    The First Commitment Period (FCP) of the Kyoto Protocol ended in December 2012.

    After much acrimonious negotiations at Durban, the Second Commitment Period (SCP)

    was agreed upon. This will expire in December 2020, when the new globally binding

    post-2015 agreement will take effect. During the FCP, industrialised countries committedto reducing GHG emissions by an average of 5 per cent below 1990 levels. During the

    SCP, the commitment is to reduce emissions relative to 1990 levels by 18 per cent.

    On the other hand, the non-Annex 1 countries, which account for about 80 per cent of

    the world population, are not required to meet any assigned targets. This premise has

    not been acceptable to some developed countries. The United States, for instance, opted

    out of the Kyoto Protocol right from the start even though until recently it was the

    biggest carbon emitter in the world. These countries want emerging economies such

    as India and China, whose emissions are increasing as a result of the ongoing development

    and economic growth, to take on binding commitments as well. Post-2012, Canada,too, withdrew from the Kyoto process. Russia, Japan and New Zealand have not accepted

    any reduction commitments for the SCP for the same reason. Effectively, therefore,

    the SCP puts reduction targets only on 15 per cent of world emissions.

    Thus, the Kyoto process today stands greatly undermined. The U.S. has all along

    favoured a single framework ( Frontline , December 18, 2009) on the basis of a bottom-up

    approach premised on unilateral emission reduction commitments by all countries which

    would include India and China as well--commitments that are measurable, reportable

    and verifiable (MRV)

    quasi-formalisation of this process occurred at COP-16 in Cancun, Mexico, in 2010when the Cancun agreements included a list of pledges by individual countries, with

    nothing said about the "review" process that should go with it. "All countries must

    accept binding commitments in some appropriate legal form," the then Indian Minister

    of Environment and Forests, Jairam Ramesh, famously said at Cancun.

    Arguing that India must be seen to be part of the solution and not part of the problem,

    Ramesh overruled the negotiators and declared at Cancun that India would reduce its

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    emission intensity by 20-25 per cent of its gross domestic product (GDP) by 2020 from

    the 2005 levels as the Indian pledge in the new globally binding bottom-up approach.

    This target was the Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Action (NAMA) that it had

    communicated to the UNFCCC in 2009 under the Bali Action Plan of COP-13 as a

    voluntary measure and not as a binding target.

    : "Towards 2015 COP at Paris, India has decided to strengthen its negotiating team, its

    negotiating efforts, taking other countries along with us... we have eight missions; we

    may add one or two more.... The issue is that the world must recognise that India needs

    to grow.... So we will seek a window up to say 2050. Then our scenario may plateau

    and then come down...."

    This is a throwback to the pre-Ramesh negotiating stance of India not being prepared

    to undertake any binding emission cuts. Indeed, this was the burden of India's submission

    to the UNFCCC on the work plan for the Durban Platform. It said: "The

    responsibilities/obligations of developing countries in a post-2020 arrangement willclearly need to be built on the principles of equity and CBDR. Irrespective of the legal

    form of the final arrangements, the developing country targets under such arrangements

    cannot be binding until the principle of differentiation based on equity is defined and

    the conditions implicit in such definition of equity are met

    One of the reasons for domestic policies not being predicated upon climate change

    imperatives is a lack of detailed State or regional level impact assessments and

    vulnerability maps on factors such as agricultural productivity, monsoon variability

    and sea-level rise, to appropriately tailor the State-level policies and the State Action

    Plans on Climate Change (SAPCCs).

    The Indian approach to equity in climate negotiations has always been premised on the

    basis of per capita emissions (PCE) per year, which is about 1.7 tonnes (ranked 127th)

    as compared to China's 6.2 tonnes (ranked 55th) and the U.S.' 16.4 tonnes (ranked

    eighth). In terms of gross emissions, they account respectively for 6.41 per cent (the

    fourth biggest emitter), 26.43 per cent (the biggest emitter) and 17.33 per cent (the

    second biggest). The scientific basis for this approach is that atmosphere is a global

    commons. But global warming restricts the available carbon space (the amount of GHG

    that can be emitted without breaching the 2deg C ceiling or the "carbon budget") for

    humanity as a whole. Equity in a climate change agreement implies right of equitable

    access to this carbon space and operationalisation of these rights (at a national level).

    The per capita approach means that this available carbon space be apportioned equally

    across all individuals of the world. This implies equity between nations as part of an

    international agreement and equity within nations through domestic actions. The thrust

    of the UNFCCC equity principle and the Indian approach to equity is that "historical

    emissions" of industrialised nations have greatly shrunk the available sink capacity of

    the atmosphere for future carbon emissions necessary for the growth of developing

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    countries. Thus, these historically accumulated stocks, and not flows, of carbon emissions

    must form the basis for assigning equitable access to available carbon space. It is the

    relative contribution of GHG emission stocks that would determine the used up carbon

    space by various nations and how much of it remains for use by all nations in the future.

    India used equity as a defensive mechanism in negotiations. While agreeing that equity

    was being used as a negotiating tactic, Raghunandan favoured the per capita approach

    but with the caveat that it would be more effective internationally if India were to

    address this issue domestically in its developmental policies, in terms of energy and

    resources access, linked with environment and sustainability issues, which unfortunately

    was not happening.

    With available carbon space becoming highly constrained, from the perspective of

    developing countries, equity should be non-negotiable and should form the basis of

    any global agreement post-2015. However, the equity principle is yet to become central

    to the negotiations despite there being several formulations of it. The problem is, asJayaraman pointed out, which among these different formulations, which appear similar

    and comparable, should be picked.

    The Indian negotiating team should, therefore, engage with as many countries as possible

    to evolve a common strategy for advancing the idea of equity and arrive at a formulation

    of equity that would be acceptable to as many countries as possible. It is becoming

    increasingly clear that a "pledge-and-review" kind of agreement is likely to be the

    outcome at Paris. The question then is: What kind of a structure should it have so that

    equity could become an integral part of it?

    Besides the BASIC group, India has also used the forum of Like-Minded DevelopingCountries (LMDCs) to formulate a common stand on climate change. But, as Raghunandan

    pointed out, India should try and win over countries of the Africa Group, the LDCs and

    SISs as well to create a much larger common front to address questions such as "What

    are the overarching terms that an agreement should have?",

    Modi forges climate ties with Obama Thu, Oct 9, 2014environment, Down to Earth, climate change,

    During his US visit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed support for new global

    climate pact to be signed in Paris by end of 2015; two countries to cooperate on various

    climate protection and energy security measures

    A highlight of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to the US last week was

    the joint declaration with US president Barack Obama to address the threat of climate

    change and energy issues. Keeping in view India's rising energy demands, energy

    access problems and need to enhance adaptation and loss and damage framework, the

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    two leaders launched a partnership on clean energy, energy security and climate change.

    Modi-Obama also reaffirmed efforts to strengthen the US-India Partnership to Advance

    Clean Energy (PACE). A set of priority areas identified under PACE will help India

    expand its renewable energy capacity within its electricity grid, and pursue alternative

    energy sources.

    Yet another venture under this set of agreements is the extension of the Promoting

    Energy Access through Clean Energy (PEACE). The PEACE programme is set to

    provide increased levels of private sector investment and fast track the implementation

    of cost effective, super energy-efficient appliances to provide a million more people

    access to modern sources of energy. In order to enhance private sector investment, the

    governments also agreed to form a new Clean Energy Finance Forum.

    The joint statement also addressed the highly debated issue of hydrofluorocarbons

    (HFCS). It called upon the governments to form a bilateral task force to analyse the

    financial, technological and policy implications of including HFCs under the Montreal

    Protocol while leaving their emissions to be accounted for under United Nations

    Framework Convention for Climate Change mechanism (UNFCCC). The two countries

    had been in a state of logjam over this issue in the past, however, it appears that the

    countries have taken positive steps to address the challenge posed by HFCs which cause

    global warming several times more than carbon dioxide.

    The two sides also plan to set-up a new US- India Climate Fellowship Programme that

    aims to build long-term infrastructure and improve capacities for responding to climate

    change. Other agreed measures aim at improvement in air quality in India and improve

    India's resilience against extreme weather events that have been hitting the countrywith alarming frequency.

    Modi and Obama directed their officials to use the US-India Energy Dialogue and Joint

    Working Group on Combating Climate Change as germane platforms to advance

    cooperation of these climate and energy initiatives.

    The two heads of state also inked a Memorandum of Understanding between the

    Export-Import Bank (EXIM Bank) and the Indian Renewable Energy Development

    Agency (IREDA). The agreement provides finance of upto $1 billion for a transition

    to a low-carbon economy that gives climate and energy benefits, while boosting US

    renewable energy exports to India. A part of this finance will be used for expandingthe new phase of Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (JNNSM) to 3,000 MW.

    The joint communique also added, "Both leaders are committed to working towards a

    successful outcome in Paris in 2015 of the conference of the UN Framework Convention

    on Climate Change (UNFCCC), including the creation of a new global agreement on

    climate change." There are still major differences over their positions in climate talks,

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    but these commitments reflect the willingness of the nations to deliver on commitments

    to combat climate change.

    World growth 'unsustainable', warns US-based group of museums Tue, Oct 7, 2014environment, Down to Earth, climate change,

    , the Smithsonian Institution, a renowned group of US museums and research centres,

    has published its first official statement on climate change. [2] The release warns "the

    world of its unsustainable course" as "the situation is becoming critical for wild species

    and for the preservation of human civilization".

    The statement is based on the findings of 500 Smithsonian scientists who have been

    working around the world to see the impact of a warming planet.

    The institution has also started an initiative "Living in the Anthropocene" to "expand

    climate change outside of just science and take Smithsonian resources to look at what

    other scholars and professionals are doing in various areas with regard to climate

    change."

    Tibetan plateau becomes focus of intense climate study Wed, Oct 1, 2014environment, The Hindu, tibet, climate change,

    The Tibetan plateau has become the focus of intense meteorological study in a never-before

    attempt to understand its effect on climate locally as well as globally,

    This development follows close on the heels of the massive floods which hit Kashmir

    and Pakistan recently.

    The $49-million Chinese effort, in which the plateau is being flooded with sensors, is

    aimed to help predict extreme weather -- both in Asia and as far away as North America

    -- and give scientists knowledge on how climate change affects these events.

    Having a high altitude, the plateau receives more sunlight, gets hotter than land at sea

    level. Acting like a giant heating plate it pumps air upwards which disperses in the

    upper troposphere, influencing atmospheric circulation and thereby, climate.

    Being the biggest and highest plateau in the world, it disturbs the troposphere unlike

    any other structure on earth. However, there are little data on the impact on climate.

    The plateau's remoteness, altitude and harsh conditions -- it is often called the third

    pole because it hosts the world's third-largest stock of ice -- meaning that even basic

    weather stations are few.

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    "The data should help determine the extent to which different types of land surface heat

    up the overlying air, and how this might vary in response to factors such as snow cover

    and vegetation changes,"

    Wrong climate in India Wed, Oct 1, 2014environment, Businessline, climate change,

    The meet was meant to set the tone for the big bang conclave in Paris in December

    2015. Paris is expected to draw up another pact on emission cuts to replace the Kyoto

    Protocol, which lapsed in December 2012. China and India should have played a bigger

    role in New York, being two of the top emerging economies and, yes, among the top

    five emitters of greenhouse gases as well.

    As a developing country, can India brush aside emission reduction? Scientists have

    claimed that in 2013, India's carbon emissions grew by 5.1 per cent, the highest forany country, even though its emissions make up just 6.5 per cent of the world's total,

    against 28 per cent in the case of China and 14 per cent in the case of the US. While it

    is true that some 400 million Indians do not have access to electricity it does not imply

    that the sky is the limit for India's greenhouse emissions. India's per capita statistics

    conceal inequalities in access to energy -- between the rural and the urban, and between

    income groups. For instance, about 70 per cent of rural households have access to

    electricity, and within that only 40 per cent among socially and economically backward

    groups.

    Oceans report card: Global ocean health scores 67 out of 100 Wed, Oct 1, 2014environment, Down to Earth, oceans, water pollution,

    Global ocean health has scored 67 out of 100 in the Ocean Health Index for 2014, based

    on its performance on a number of goals and factors.

    The index which includes people as part of the ocean ecosystem assesses the ocean

    based on 10 widely-held public goals such as food provision, coastal livelihoods and

    economies, carbon storage, coastal protection, clean waters, biodiversity and tourism.

    While global ocean health scored well on biodiversity and livelihood goals, it fared

    badly on food production and natural products.

    "Antarctica and the southern ocean are protected by distance from many of the threats

    caused by human populations such as chemicals, excessive nutrients, pathogens and

    trash - that's why we see a very high score in a goal like clean water," "Fishing is still

    having an impact in this region, despite improved monitoring, successful efforts to

    reduce by-catch and new management of krill fisheries. This is also a region where

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    illegal, unreported and unregulated fisheries (IUUs) still persist," he added.

    Oceanic turtles face cancer risk due to water pollution, says study Wed, Oct 1, 2014

    environment, Down to Earth, pollution, water pollution,

    Polluted urban and farm runoff causes cancer in sea turtles,

    The runoff from urban and farm areas contains nitrogen which enters the algae that

    turtles eat. This causes the formation of tumours in the eyes, flippers and other internal

    organs of green turtles. The disease is called fibropapillomatosis and is the major cause

    of death among these already endangered turtles.

    In the study published in PeerJ, it was found that algae store excess nitrogen in the form

    of arginine, a type of amino acid. Arginine was present in large quantities in algae found

    in highly polluted waters and diseased turtles. Invasive algae called Hypnea musciformis,

    which can form as much as 90 per cent of the turtles' diet, was found to have high

    levels of this amino acid.

    Arginine is thought to promote a virus that leads to the disease that forms the tumours.

    Other than arginine, the researchers also found elevated levels of amino acids that are

    common in human cancer tumours, such as proline and glycine.

    Where have all the water bodies gone? Mon, Oct 6, 2014environment, drinking water, water pollution, Businessline,

    On September 6, the Madurai Bench of Madras High Court gave a landmark ruling

    directing the Government not to grant layout approval or building plan permission on

    lands located on water bodies. It was responding to a Public Interest Litigation (PIL)

    on the subject.

    The judgment comes close on the heels of the Delhi High Court's grave remark that

    the depleting water level will lead to water wars soon.

    Traditional water bodies (mainly tanks) generate innumerable benefits to the farmers

    and society. It is a low cost source of irrigation and also predominantly managed by

    the farmers themselves. The command area of most tanks is small and therefore, theproblems associated with irrigation management are less. Being a less capital-intensive

    source of irrigation, tank irrigation is considered to be user-friendly with fewer

    environmental problems.

    Tanks help capture, conserve and store what little rainfall the region receives. They

    help recharge groundwater aquifers which are stable and reliable source of irrigation

    for millions of farmers. In years of high rainfall tanks do provide some protection against

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    risk of floods by allowing surplus rainwater flow into it. In years of low rainfall, the

    stored water in tanks provides some protective irrigation as well. Should we sit back

    and watch the alarming destruction of these natural reservoirs?

    The Ministry of Environment and Forests has been implementing the centrally sponsored

    scheme of National Lake Conservation Plan (NLCP) since June 2001. This scheme

    also received substantial funds during the Eleventh Plan. The Twelfth Plan, too, accorded

    high priority to watershed restoration, groundwater recharge and groundwater law to

    tackle groundwater related problems.

    But urbanisation over the years has turned these community resources to dumping

    grounds. most of the water bodies in the country were encroached upon by municipalities

    and panchayats.

    The Standing Committee on Water Resources (2012-13) also highlighted that out of

    5.56 lakh tanks in the country, only 4.71 lakh tanks are in use. This effectively implies

    a loss of about one million hectares of irrigation potential. Tanks irrigated more than

    50 per cent of the agriculture lands in many States in India until 1950s.

    However, with the introduction of Green Revolution during the sixties, the area irrigated

    by tanks fell from 4.63 million hectares (mha) in 1960-61 to 2.04 mha in 2010-11.

    The scenario in water starved Tamil Nadu which is home to about 41,127 tanks is just

    as gloomy; its area under tank irrigation declined gradually from about 9.36 lakh hectares

    in 1960-61 to 5.28 lakh hectares in 2011-12. Are water users aware that if tanks continue

    to be neglected, the recharge mechanism will come to a halt? Even wells will cease to

    have water and diesel and electric powered pumps will be rendered useless.

    Recently, farmers across the country are bemoaning the escalatiWon in overall cost of

    cultivation brought about mechanised pumping. While the Central Groundwater Board

    estimated that out of the total 5,824 blocks in India, 1494 are either semi-critical or

    over-exploited; most wells in certain parts of the country have reportedly gone bone

    dry.

    It is high time that the government realises the gravity of the situation by setting up a

    separate ministry for small water bodies with adequate funding to conduct periodic

    repairs. A new legislation should be urgently enacted to make encroachment on water

    bodies a cognisable offence.

    As suggested by the Nobel Laureate Ellinor Ostrom, to avoid a tragedy of depletion,

    individuals should be entitled to use and run the common property resource, and set

    clear boundaries to keep out those who aren't entitled. Farmers voluntarily must come

    forward to organise themselves into tank users' organisations which will enable them

    to undertake repairing of tanks under State sponsored programmes.

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    This can lead to the revival of the traditional method of community maintenance namely

    Kudimaramathu. In order to rekindle the sense of responsibility towards preserving the

    common property resource, the State can also reward the best managed tanks in a

    locality.

    World falling behind 2020 plan for nature protection: U.N. report Tue, Oct 7, 2014environment, biodiversity outlook, The Hindu,

    The Global Biodiversity Outlook 4 , published as nearly 200 countries meet on Monday

    in South Korea in a bid to tackle biodiversity loss, paints a damning picture of

    governments' efforts to meet a set of targets agreed upon in 2010 to mitigate the

    destruction of species' habitats, cut pollution and stop overfishing by the end of the

    decade.

    Conservationists said the lack of progress, nearly halfway to the 2020 deadline for theAichi Biodiversity Targets (ABT), was a troubling sign and a reality check.

    the situation is worsening for the planet's most threatened species, which include 90

    per cent of all lemurs and species such as the blue-tongued forest giraffe and the

    spoon-billed sandpiper:

    Only five of the 20 targets, which are broken down into 56 elements, are on track for

    2020. Thirty-three show progress albeit at an insufficient rate, 10 show no progress,

    five show deterioration and three have not been evaluated.

    One small ray of light is progress toward a target of gaining protected status for 17 percent of ecosystems on land, which is on track. A similar target for the oceans is, however,

    likely to be missed.

    If the 2020 targets are missed, it will not be the first time efforts to halt the decline in

    the richness and abundance of wildlife and the natural world have fallen short.

    An assessment of goals set in 2002 to cut the rate of biodiversity loss by 2010 showed

    governments had failed to deliver on the commitments they made.

    "We're in serious danger of being in the same position as we were back in 2010, of

    not having made the progress we need to make to lead to a better society and a better

    world.

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    Perspectives on ocean mixing Fri, Oct 3, 2014environment, The Hindu, ocean,

    While it is a well-known fact that dense ocean waters in the high latitudes sink to thebottom carrying dissolved atmospheric carbon with them it is not quite clear even now

    how and where these waters return to the surface and exhale the dissolved carbon back

    into the atmosphere.

    The most recent perception is that mixing brings bottom waters up to about 2000 m

    and then they flow at that depth all the way to the southern ocean, where the roaring

    forties lift them to the surface. In this new scenario the potential energy needed from

    mixing is only half of the earlier estimate.

    Mixing is strong where the bottom topography of the ocean is rough and weak where

    it is smooth. This heterogeneity must be mapped on a global scale to determine theamount of mixing. It has been shown that 70 per cent of the waves break at the ocean

    bottom while the remaining 30 per cent propagate away from their generation sites and

    break against continental slopes where mixing is strong and make their way along the

    slopes of continents and ridges to the surface.

    World waking up to wind, solar energy: study Wed, Oct 8, 2014environment, Down to Earth, solar energy,

    It looks like the global campaigns to promote renewable energy are helping. A recent

    analysis has found that solar and wind energy's share in global power production is

    steadily at the expense of nuclear power.

    nuclear's surging growth of the 70s and 80s has actively fallen as solar and wind have

    taken up the "alternative" mantle.

    From a peak of 17.6 per cent in 1996, nuclear's share of global power production

    capacity has fallen to 10.8 per cent. In contrast, the cumulative share of the two renewable

    energy sources in global power production has gone from 18.7 per cent in 2000 to 22.7

    per cent in 2012. The figure is likely to reach 25 per cent by 2014.

    In terms of actual capacity, the peak for nuclear power was 2010, when the sectorboasted 375.3 gigawatts (GW). By last year, that total had declined to 371.8 GW,

    according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. For solar energy, the total

    installed capacity globally stands at slightly more than 140 GW, but the industry's

    growth trajectory is steep and rising daily.

    The analysis found that just 31 countries globally operate nuclear reactors on their

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    territories, compared to 85 countries that have commercial wind turbines installed, and

    more than 100 nations that have solar PV arrays installed at capacity. The report

    concludes by calling the chances of a nuclear revival "slim", adding that "practical,

    affordable" renewable energy's will likely to grow at the expense of nuclear power.

    Welcome push to solar power Wed, Oct 8, 2014environment, Businessline, solar energy,

    For a price sensitive market like India anything that reduces bills attracts attention.

    With fuel costs going up and cheap electricity a thing of the past, the challenge before

    electricity regulators in the country is to offer a package that ensures continued supply,

    with the user saving (or making) money as well. After subsidies on solar panels did

    little to popularise them, over a dozen state electricity regulators have framed guidelines

    for net metering -- a method that would allow consumers to generate electricity using

    rooftop solar panels and sell it back to the grid, thereby reducing one's electricity bills.

    The concept of net metering is coming to India long after it was introduced in the US

    -- in 1983. It took 21 years for US to fully embrace the practice but already 14 out of

    the 29 Indian States have issued net metering guidelines.

    At present, 4-5 kW solar panels sell for [?] 4-5 lakh. On an average, a 4 kW panel will

    generate 3,400 kWh (units) of electricity a year. Assuming an average middle-class

    household consumes 500 units of electricity a month or 6,000 units annually, it would

    take nearly 15 years of power generation just to make up the cost of the solar panels.

    But given that electricity distribution utilities would need to invest in upgrading allpower distribution systems, actual implementation may still be some way off. The

    neighbourhood transformers and electricity distribution equipment are currently tuned

    to feeding power, not tapping it.

    Without the incentive of large-scale generation, distribution utilities may not find it

    feasible to implement net metering for individual households by spending large sums

    to upgrade the distribution infrastructure.

    Innovation key to meet Aichi biodiversity targets by 2020Tue, Oct 7, 2014environment, Down to Earth, Aichi biodiversity targets,

    The United Nations (UN) has called for "bold and innovative" action to meet the goals

    of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity by 2020. The fourth edition of the Global

    Biodiversity Outlook (GBO4) says there has been significant progress in meeting some

    components of the Aichi biodiversity targets, but additional action is required to keep

    the plan on course.

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    In 2002, the Parties to the Convention on Biological Biodiversity (CBD) committed to

    a significant reduction in the rate of biodiversity loss by 2010. The effort was successful

    only partially and hence, a renewed commitment was made in 2010 in the form of the

    Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020 for urgent action in this decade. It comprised

    of 20 new targets, called the Aichi biodiversity targets.

    "This watershed moment was a recognition that biodiversity is not a problem to be

    solved, but essential for sustainable development, and the foundation for human

    well-being," Braulio Ferreira de Souza Dias, UN assistant-Secretary-General and CBD

    executive secretary, writes in GBO4.

    "The factors prompting policymakers to safeguard biodiversity are increasingly economic

    in nature. Without healthy biodiversity, livelihoods, ecosystem services, habitats and

    food security will be compromised, Reducing deforestation rates have been estimated

    to result in an annual benefit of US $183 billion in the form of ecosystem services."

    Key points of the Global Development Outlook report: Meeting the Aichi biodiversity

    targets will contribute to global priorities on the post-2015 development agenda. There

    are opportunities to support implementation of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity

    2011-2020 through enhanced technical and scientific cooperation among parties to the

    Conference on Biological Diversity. For success of the strategic plan, all levels of

    government and stakeholders across society need to be aware of the multiple values of

    biodiversity and related ecosystems. There is need for an overall substantial increase

    in total biodiversity-related funding.

    Some of the areas that have witnessed progress include increase in protected areas,access and benefit-sharing of resources, promotion of sustainable use, slowing down

    of loss of forest habitats like the Brazilian Amazon, restoration efforts of degraded

    ecosystems, especially forests and wetlands, among others. Belgium, Belarus, Brazil,

    Japan, the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland are some of the countries that have

    set targets to restore at least 15 per cent of degraded lands.

    For the majority of the targets, however, additional efforts are required to meet the 2020

    deadline - reduction of pollution and pressures on the ecosystem from land-based and

    marine activities and preventing the extinction of known threatened species. What is

    needed is a package of actions, such as legal or policy framework, socio-economic

    incentive and public and stakeholder engagement.

    "Since the agreement on the Strategic Plan on Biodiversity in 2010, encouraging steps

    have been taken around the world to tackle biodiversity loss at many levels. This plan

    and the Aichi biodiversity targets remain a solid framework on which to concentrate

    action that will lead us towards a world in harmony with nature," the report concludes.

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    An unsustainable course Fri, Oct 10, 2014environment, The Hindu, wildlife, aichi targets,

    The precipitous decline in the population of wild animals should serve as a clear warningto humanity that it is living beyond its means. The Worldwide Fund for Nature and the

    Zoological Society of London recently reported that the number of wild creatures on

    earth has plunged to half of what it was four decades ago; in the case of some classes

    of animals, the loss is staggeringly high. Turtle populations, for instance, are estimated

    to have declined by 80 per cent. It is the developing world that should be particularly

    concerned at the data on animal populations: habitat degradation, pollution, and

    unsustainable extraction of natural resources in the emerging economies are robbing

    them of biodiversity that is essential for human well-being. Impacts of climate change

    pose a new threat to flora and fauna in these countries. Significantly, some of these

    nations are also the biodiversity hotspots that harbour an extraordinarily large number

    of species -- new ones continue to be discovered every year even as old ones disappear.

    These trends show that vital needs such as fresh water, clean air and benign climate

    patterns are threatened, and there is a need for urgent action.

    Governments in the global north and south must commit themselves to the full

    implementation of treaties and conventions on protection of wild animals and habitats

    if the erosion is to be stemmed. They can achieve this partly by strengthening the

    Convention on Biological Diversity which has, under the Aichi targets, resolved to

    increase the protected areas of the world from 13 per cent to 17 per cent of land by

    2020 and to prevent the further loss of known threatened species. At the same time,

    restraints would have to be placed on commercial extraction of marine resources suchas fish, to give depleted stocks time to regenerate. It is evident that with every passing

    decade, the capacity to trawl the seas on an industrial scale and harvest a wide variety

    of species is outpacing the natural cycle for rebuilding their stocks. More sustainable

    methods to grow food on land and in captive areas have to replace the unbridled

    exploitation of nature. There is hope that good conservation strategies will stem or even

    reverse the 40 per cent declines witnessed in key wild animal populations. The challenge

    is very real for India as it struggles with habitat loss and rising demand for energy and

    natural resources. It must resist the temptation to open up its last remaining forests and

    wetlands to commercial exploitation and encroachment if it is to safeguard ecosystem

    services such as water and food. The emphasis should be on restoration of habitat andan end to pollution through strict enforcement of environmental and forest laws.

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    Typhoon Phanfone batters Japan Mon, Oct 6, 2014Typhoon Phanfone, japan, environment, Down to Earth,

    Most of Japan was brought to a standstill as Typhoon Phanfone lashed the country,resulting in high waves, heavy rains and disruption of power lines and flights on Sunday.

    According to BBC, three US airmen, who the police claim were taking photographs of

    the sea in Okinawa, were washed away in the storm. One of them has been confirmed

    dead, while the other two remain missing. Okinawa is home to about half of the 50,000

    US troops stationed in Japan, The Guardian reports.

    India might agree to discuss HFCs under Montreal Protocol Thu, Oct 9, 2014HFCs, environment, Montreal Protocol, Down to Earth,

    India and US have embarked on a "new and enhanced strategic partnership on energy

    security, clean energy and climate change"

    Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on clean energy according to which the US

    will provide up to US $1 billion as loan to help India shift to renewables US tried to

    link the energy pact with hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) - a coolant that causes global

    warming - so that India agrees to discuss HFCs under the Montreal Protocol. The

    international treaty regulates substances that deplete the ozone layer like aerosols,

    refrigerants and solvents.

    after intense back channel negotiations leading to the joint statement, it seems that thelogjam over HFCs may soon be lifted and India might agree to form a "contact group"

    at the meeting of parties to the Montreal Protocol in November this year. Such a move

    will be a departure from India's earlier stated stand which insisted on discussing it

    under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). HFCs and other

    greenhouse gases are already covered under the UNFCCC

    "the need to use the institutions and expertise of the Montreal Protocol to reduce

    consumption and production of HFCs, while continuing to report and account for the

    quantities reduced under the UNFCCC".

    India has been blocking efforts to set up a "contact group" under the Montreal Protocolthat will discuss how HFCs can be tackled. This is because alternative technologies

    that will replace HFCs are expensive and the proprietary rights to these alternatives lie

    with US multinationals which hold patents to hydrofluoroolefins (HFOs) and are pushing

    them as a replacement to HFCs.

    Though HFCs were introduced as ozone-friendly gases, they are greenhouse gases with

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    high global warming potential. The US and several other developed countries have

    long been pushing to replace HFCs with alternative technologies, such as HFOs, and

    want the matter to be discussed under the Montreal Protocol.

    Coolant heats up climate debate The global warming potential of HFCs is several

    thousand times that of CO2. 80% of HFCs are currently being used in the developed

    countries but their demand is rapidly increasing in developing countries as well. In

    India, the cooling sector, which uses HFCs, is set to grow at the rate of 20 per cent a

    year. India needs to leapfrog from global warming HFCs to low-global warming

    alternatives. An Indian company has already made the transition to climate-friendly

    alternative-propane. Many HFC alternatives have energy efficiency benefits apart from

    climate benefits. This will reduce India's dependence on fossil fuel imports.

    Singapore shrouded in Indonesian haze Wed, Oct 8, 2014forest fire, environment, Down to Earth, Singapore,

    Air pollution levels in Singapore reached the highest levels this year on October 7 due

    to a haze caused by fires in forests in Indonesia.

    The fires are an annual feature and a major irritant in relations between the two countries.

    Most of the times, they are lighted illegally for clearing land to grow crops.

    Indonesia has been trying to deal with the problem for some time. On September 16,

    the parliament of Indonesia ratified the ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze

    Pollution [5] it had signed 12 years ago. The agreement requires the country to dedicate

    more resources to deal with the problem and make its policies on forest fires morestringent.

    Earth Overshoot Day Sat, Oct 11, 2014Earth Overshoot Day, environment, Frontline,

    AUGUST 19 was Earth Overshoot Day: an estimate of the moment in a 12-month

    period when humans have consumed more natural resources than the biosphere can

    replace and created more waste than it can absorb. This means that humanity is already

    living off next year's supplies, which in turn means that next year's supplies will end

    even sooner than this year's. No wonder Earth Overshoot Day is also called Ecological

    Debt Day.

    Earth Overshoot Day does not follow the standard practice of having a fixed commemorative

    day and is more of a countdown. It was first commemorated on December 19, 1987,

    when humanity was 11 days in debt. Since then, the ecological debt has been accelerating.

    In 2000, Earth Overshoot Day occurred in October. In 2014, it has advanced by two

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    months.

    Conceived in 1990 by Mathis Wackernagel and William Rees at the University of

    British Columbia, the Ecological Footprint is now in wide use by groups as diverse as

    scientists, businesses, governments, agencies and institutions. The website explains the

    Footprint as representing "two sides of a balance sheet. On the asset side, biocapacity

    represents the planet's biologically productive land areas, including our forests, pastures,

    cropland and fisheries. These areas, especially if left unharvested, can also absorb much

    of the waste we generate, especially our carbon emissions. Biocapacity can then be

    compared with humanity's demand on nature: our Ecological Footprint. The Ecological

    Footprint represents the productive area required to provide the renewable resources

    humanity is using and to absorb its waste. The productive area currently occupied by

    human infrastructure is also included in this calculation, since built-up land is not

    available for resource regeneration." In simple terms, the Footprint "addresses whether

    the planet is large enough to keep up [with] the demands of humanity".

    The obvious conclusion is that the planet certainly does not have the capacity to keep

    on satisfying the current rate of human demand. Using the Footprint to explain the

    extent of humanity's "overshoot", the GFN draws the attention of governments, investors

    and opinion leaders and demonstrates to "the advantages of making ecological limits

    central to decision-making".

    It is no secret that the planet has a finite quantity of resources that are being used up

    faster than they are being replaced. Fifty years ago, most areas of the globe had more

    resources than were consumed. But now, 86 per cent of the people in the world live in

    countries with a huge ecological footprint, where the demands literally strip the country

    of its resources at a rate faster than they can be replenished.

    Kalam stresses need for carbon-free cities Tue, Oct 7, 2014environment, urban areas, The Hindu,

    "To have carbon-neutral cities is my dream. Whether smart cities or over-smart cities,

    the urban areas should be places for healthy living,"

    The growing migration to urban areas poses challenge in creation of clean environment

    Power Ministry Initiates Several Measures for Promoting Energy Efficiency i Wed, Oct 8, 2014environment, PIB, Energy Efficiency,

    Light Emitting Diode (LED ) are emerging as the most energy-efficient source of

    lighting, with a LED bulb using 1/10th as much energy as a normal incandescent bulb

    and half as much energy as a Compact Fluorescent Lamp (CFL) to produce the same

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    amount of light. However, the major challenge has been its high cost. The first LED

    lamp made in India, in 2010 was sold for Rs.1200.

    Consequently, a roadmap was prepared, in close cooperation with the lighting industry,

    which sought to: (a) ensure the quality and reliability of LED lamps; (b) reduce the

    price of LED lamps, initially through large scale public procurement and then through

    a labelling programme; and (c) facilitate awareness and demonstration of this lighting

    through its technology.

    in order to enhance demand for LED bulbs , the Ministry of Power, decided that

    henceforth all bulbs provided to below-poverty line households at the time of connection,

    estimated to be about 3.4 million, under the Rajiv Gandhi Grameen Vidyuthikaran

    Yojana (RGGVY) would use LED technology.

    BEE together with EESL (Energy Efficiency Services Limited, a joint venture of 4

    power sector central PSUs) have worked with electricity distribution companies to

    develop a business model under which EESL procures LED bulbs in bulk and sells

    them to households at Rs.10 instead of the market price of Rs.400. The electricity

    distribution companies then repays EESL, over a period of 5 to 8 years from the savings

    that accrue due to use of this energy efficient lighting technology.

    At a price of Rs.204, LED are just 30-40% costlier than CFLs. As compared to CFLs,

    LEDs are 50% more energy efficient apart from not using mercury as is the case with

    CFL. Also, LEDs have life that is 4-5 times more than CFLs and therefore are cheaper

    option on life cycle cost basis. A barrier of use of LEDs in household sector is the lack

    of standardisation and awareness. BEE will now be launching a labelling programme,

    coupled with an outreach and awareness campaign, to drive the LED demand significantly.The present demand of ICLs and CFLs is more than 1.1 billion units every year.

    Green-rated buildings not keeping their promise, says CSE report Sat, Oct 11, 2014bureau of energy efficiency, environment, The Hindu,

    Data put out by the Indian Green Building Council (IGBC) on energy consumption of

    large commercial buildings that were rated and awarded silver, gold and platinum

    ratings, under the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green-rating

    programme, show they are grossly underperforming, the report says.

    India started to mirror the global trends in green rating when the United States Green

    Building Council (USGBC) began rating buildings in India.

    In 2007, LEED India (Leadership in Energy and environmental Design-India) was

    adapted from the USGBC LEED programme. This is a private initiative run by the

    IGBC.

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    India adopted the Green-rated Integrated Habitat Assessment (GRIHA) as the national

    rating system for buildings in 2007

    Several State governments were giving fiscal incentives and allowance of extra built-up

    area to developers to promote private green-rating programmes. The report points to alack of stringent and transparent monitoring of actual energy and resource use during

    building operation, and questions the need for a few green-rated buildings which were

    given sops for meeting the minimum green standards that all buildings must ideally

    implement.

    Gujarat to host India's first offshore wind power project Thu, Oct 9, 2014environment, Down to Earth, offshore wind power,

    The project will be of about 100 MW capacity. The JVC will undertake detailed

    feasibility study based on the inputs received from pre-feasibility studies and necessary

    steps for implementing the project.

    The government has proposed a subsidy for setting up of evacuation and transmission

    infrastructure of the offshore wind power to the main land, which includes financial

    support for carrying out studies such as wind resource assessment, environment impact

    assessment (EIA), oceanographic survey and Bathymetric studies.

    The project is expected to provide lessons for future rapid growth of off-shore wind

    power. India has around 7,600 km of coastline which offers great potential for offshore

    wind power development.

    In the early 1990s, MNRE had taken up onshore demonstration projects in various

    states. A total of 71 MW of demonstration projects in seven states had had attracted

    interest and has led to deployment of about 22,000 MW of on-shore wind with private

    sector investment. Going by the success of demonstration on-shore wind power project,

    MNRE has decided to go for a demonstration offshore wind power project.

    Air pollution responsible for decline in monsoon rains in last 50 yea Fri, Oct 10, 2014Air pollution, environment, monsoon, Down to Earth,

    The scientists of the study found that "emissions of tiny air particles from man-made

    sources--known as anthropogenic aerosols was responsible for the reduction of rainfall

    in the second half of the 20th century".

    "This study shows for the first time that the drying of the monsoon over the last 50

    years cannot be explained by natural climate variability and that human activity has

    played a significant role in altering the seasonal monsoon rainfall on which billions of

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    people depend,

    high levels of aerosols in the atmosphere cause heat from the sun to be reflected back

    into space, lowering temperatures on the Earth's surface and reducing rainfall. And, it

    adds that levels of aerosol emissions have increased considerably since the 1950s, with

    the most common sources being power stations and cars.

    changes to global rainfall patterns can have consequences for human health and

    agriculture, as summer monsoons are "an integral component of Earth's hydrological

    cycle and affect the lives of billions of people",

    Panel invites consultations on review of green laws Tue, Oct 7, 2014environment, The Hindu, green laws,

    On August 29, the Environment Ministry had constituted the HLC to review the Air

    (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act,1981, the Water (Prevention and Control of

    Pollution) Act, 1974, the Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980, the Environment (Protection)

    Act, 1986 and the Wildlife (Protection) Act,1972 with four terms of reference aimed

    at recommending "specific amendments to bring them in line with current objectives

    to meet requirements," among other things.

    Environmental groups say that the whole attempt by the MoEF is to dismantle regulation

    of any kind.