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A plan goes awry

The media report that most of the environment ministry’s Environment Supplement Plan (ESL) is a lift from a similar report prepared by a US agency is both shocking

Published on: Jul 11, 2016 08:43 AM IST
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The media report that most of the environment ministry’s Environment Supplement Plan (ESL) is a lift from a similar report prepared by a US agency is both shocking and embarrassing. It is shocking because officers at the highest level in government thought fit to do such a thing, when we, Indians, already have a bad reputation in this regard. Part of the damage could have been undone if an acknowledgement had been made in the text. And it is embarrassing because the administration has steered clear of the matter by saying only the idea was borrowed and ‘nothing was copied’ despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

HT Image
HT Image

Looking at the administration’s position that only ideas were taken from the US text, some questions do come up. First, it is the orientation of the two reports. Assuming that in some areas the environment problems in the US and in India overlap, there can be a case for a synergy of ideas. While it is widely known that environment degradation is partly a technological outcome worked upon by human labour, the way out of the mess created from the time of the first industrial revolution is also technology. If an entrepreneur wishes to go ahead with his project without getting environmental clearances and seeks to undo the damage through remedial measures, law could be suitably amended to allow him do so. Under the present legislation, such a thing is punishable. The Environment Supplement Plan can be broadened to make it similar to trading in carbon credits, which lets a country get credit if it keeps its carbon emissions below a level and sell it to the other countries.

 
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