Opinion

Environment protection is big business

20 Oct 2002 |
Mr Sandeep Singh
| The Hindu Business Line

Environment protection is not only about green forests, tigers, blue skies and a handful of NGOs arguing for a noble cause. It is big business. With rapid population growth and the aggressive speed of industrialisation the world over, suppliers of pollution control equipment, cleaner technologies and related services are looking to cater to an enormous and growing market. It has been estimated that the global market in these goods and services is around $550 billion, and is likely to touch $640 billion by 2010, a figure comparable with the size of the pharmaceuticals and information technology industries.

Regulators: Who is better and why?

02 Oct 2002 |
Ms Ekta Bhardwaj
,
Ms Anjali Garg
| The Hindu Business Line

Is telecom performing better than power? A sharper question: Is the telecommunications regulator performing better than the electricity regulator? Or is the opposite true?

Climate change issues: need for effective communication

02 Oct 2002 |
| TERI Newswire 8(19)

The Eighth Session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, CoP-8 for short, begins this week in New Delhi, bringing to the attention of the public once again the complex issues surrounding science, policy, and impacts of global climate change: what is the extent of likely change and how it was estimated; how should the responsibility be apportioned among countries; and what must be done to reduce the adverse impacts of the predicted change.

Hope for a better public transport system?

17 Sep 2002 |
| TERI Newswire 8(18)

Two recent news items came as rays of hope on the literally darkening horizons of the city of Delhi, darkening not because of the progressively shorter days but because of polluted air, which has been attributed mainly to suspended particles from the city's growing fleet of automobiles. The first item was that the Mashelkar committee, which was entrusted with the task of recommending a national policy on fuels for automobiles, submitted its final report to the government last week; the second item also related to a report, which has been prepared by the Department of Transport, Government of the National Capital Territory of Delhi, which outlines measures to make public transport in the city reliable, efficient, and commuter-friendly.

Unscaled summit? - an enduring process

09 Sep 2002 |
Dr R K Pachauri
| Thr Pioneer

I can say I am not unhappy with the outcome of the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) Johannesburg. This is because I did not go with inflated expectations to be let down. Events of this nature are not going to change the tide of the opinion of the public and policy-makers in favour of development. But they definitely raise awareness on these issues. This in turn is crucial for shaping opinion within the country and internationally.

Earth Summit: a balance sheet

08 Sep 2002 |
Mr C Dasgupta
| The Hindu Business Line

Opinion is divided on what the Earth Summit in Johannesburg achieved. Developed countries pushed their WTO agenda on issues such as labour standards and eco-labelling. Developing countries responded by pressing for removal of trade-distorting subsidies for agriculture in the North. The two sides fought to a standstill and the finally-agreed formulations are marginal departures from the trade agenda agreed in Doha, says C Dasgupta.

The WSSD: challenges for the global community

01 Sep 2002 |
Dr R K Pachauri
| TERI Newswire 8(17)

The World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) at Johannesburg began against a background of almost universal pessimism about its outcome. As distinct from the Rio Summit of 1992, the Johannesburg Summit did not receive the kind of media attention that led to very high expectations in the case of Rio. This, perhaps, was an asset, because the delegations that took part in the official discussions at the WSSD were under pressure to produce some tangible results. Perhaps, by pronouncing WSSD as a non-event, the media helped to create an atmosphere by which some positive outcome became inevitable. In the end, some positive outcomes did emerge.

From Rio to Johannesburg - a lost decade

27 Aug 2002 |
Mr C Dasgupta
| The Hindu Business Line

The twenty years from 1972 to 1992 saw a remarkable change in the way in which mankind views its relationship with the planet it inhabits. Because of the rapid development of technology, human activities impose much greater stresses on the earth's resources than ever before, imperilling the livelihoods of future generations. At the same time, technology and economic prosperity provide to an unprecedented extent the means for protecting the environment and for repairing the environmental damage done.

Digital documents: free flow of information

17 Aug 2002 |
| TERI Newswire 8(16)

Any agency that claims to provide a news service ends up building a sizeable collection of news clippings, which continues to grow alarmingly rapidly. Given that newspapers have a limited shelf life, preserving the clippings is a difficult job; preserving them in a way that permits easy access to the information they contain is even more difficult. Information technology offers several solutions to this problem, one of the easy ones being to scan each clipping and store the image.

'Environmental issues must become part of our political agenda'

06 Aug 2002 |
Dr R K Pachauri
| The Financial Express

As environmental issues get set to take the centrestage at the forthcoming Earth Summit, scheduled for August 26 in Johannesburg, there is no other person in the country who is better equipped to talk about the climate change and global warming issues than Dr R K Pachauri, Director-General of TERI, and the first representative of an industrialising country to be elected as the chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

In an e-mail interview with Shebonti Ray Dadwal of The Financial Express, Dr Pachauri talks about various issues related to environment and climate change, and their impact on industrialing countries like India.