Political parties pledge to reduce pollution in manifestos.
Promises
to fight the world’s most toxic air have made it to the manifestos
of major political parties for the first time in Indian
elections. Major political parties such as the ruling Bharatiya
Janata Party, the opposition Indian National Congress and the Aam
Aadmi Party have pledged to combat the crisis by taking measures
ranging from setting deadlines, introducing new emission standards to
promoting electric vehicles in a bid to fight toxic air.
That
is a change from the 2014 elections when none of the party
manifestos had any mention of clean air or pollution.
India,
home to world’s top ten cities with the worst air quality, has been
struggling to contain a deadly haze that killed an estimated 1.24
million citizens in 2017. In the past, governments have pledged
millions of dollars and deployed extra teams to enforce existing
environmental laws that include banning farmers from burning their
fields. But the sheer scale of India’s toxic skies has made
progress difficult.
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Air
pollution on the agenda
The
ruling BJP’s election manifesto promises to focus on 102 most
polluted cities in the country. “We will reduce the level of
pollution in each of the mission cities by at least 35 percent over
the next five years,” it says, lauding itself for “effective
steps” taken to reduce the level of pollution.
The
Congress party manifesto calls air
pollution a national public health emergency. It promises to
strengthen the National Clean Air Program to tackle pollution. “All
major sources of emission will be targeted, mitigated and reduced to
acceptable levels,” it says.
The
manifesto of the Aam Aadmi Party, which runs the government in the
national capital of New Delhi, promises induction of electric buses
and vacuum cleaning of roads, among other measures to address the
pollution problem. In order to control smog in Delhi, the AAP
implemented a program in 2015 to arrest vehicular emissions through
traffic controls.
It
is a ‘‘good sign’’ that political parties haven’t ignored
air pollution, according to Anumita Roy Chowdhury, executive director
of research at advocacy group Centre for Science and Environment.
“The intent and the purpose have to get much clearer and sharper
through strong political mandate for real action afterwards,” she
said in a phone interview.
A
recent study by The Lancet found 77 per cent of India’s 1.4 billion
people exposed to air far dirtier than recommended limits. The poor
are the worst hit by pollution, according to The Lancet.
The
bigger political parties’ focus on pollution should eventually
trickle down to manifestos and agendas of regional parties, according
to Hem Himanshu Dholakia, senior research associate at the Council on
Energy, Environment and Water. “Air pollution can be solved through
action by both the center and states in terms of tackling local
sources, for example, waste burning, which will require more action
from local bodies,” Dholakia said.
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