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In order to encourage and incentivise the industrial units to cut air pollution, Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani launched India's first emissions trading scheme (ETS) in Ahmedabad on the World Environment Day.
The theme of this year’s World Environment Day was air pollution.
The Gujarat Pollution Control Board has started the scheme first in Surat as a pilot. A team of researchers from the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago (EPIC), the Economic Growth Center at Yale University and others from The Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL), have devised the ETS.
According to the scheme, the GPCB will first define the total mass of pollution that can be released into the air over a certain fixed period by all industrial units together. This will be equivalent to the cap. The permits would then become units which could be bought and sold under the ETS. "This is like the commodities you trade on the national commodity exchange," a senior GPCB official said.
The pollution board picked Surat since it is a densely-populated industrial centre and the textiles and dyeing houses there produce heavy air pollution, officials said.
According to GPCB Chairman Rajiv Gupta, around 150 industrial units are expected to trade on the national commodities exchange on 1 July as a test case.
From August, the ETS would come into effect for all industrial units in Surat, Gupta said.
(With inputs from IANS)
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