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Deaths caused by pollution... is that a thing? Well, for the Environment Ministry it doesn’t seem to be one.
The ministry has rubbished studies of deaths due to pollution, even as it has failed to commission any study of its own on this big question.
RTIs filed by The Quint reveal that the Environment Ministry has spent less than half a percent of its already dipping annual budget – on research.
Of 8,00,000 deaths in South East Asia due to pollution in 2012, 6,20,000, or a massive 77% were from India, according to a WHO 2016 report. A Greenpeace report says 3,300 Indians died everyday in 2015 due to pollution, taking the number to 12 lakh in the year.
To seek answers on how seriously the Ministry of Environment was taking pollution and deaths associated with it, The Quint filed RTIs on the following queries:
The government did share details of the ministry’s overall budget and budget for research in particular. But the details weren’t promising.
You ask why?
While the overall budget took a hit over the last five years, the government budget on research has remained static – at an amazingly miniscule low!
This is not true only for this year but for the last five years.
From 2012-2013 to 2016-2017, the average percent of the budget spent on research is 0.24 percent.
It isn’t like the government had not made the correlation between deaths and pollution earlier.
In 2012, the Central Pollution Control Board report, titled ‘Epidemiological Study on Effect of Air Pollution on Human Health in Delhi’ recommended a study be conducted at regular intervals to detect and analyse the health effects of air pollution.
Also read: Environment Ministry in Denial Mode on Deaths Due to Pollution
Despite recognising the need, despite research coming from credible pollution watchers, despite all the anecdotal evidence – the government still hasn’t got its act together against the adverse effects of pollution on health.
We can laugh at Trump, but we’re living in denial here as well.
(This article is being republished for World Environment Day on 5 June, it was originally published on 4 June, 2017)
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