New Delhi: Opposition members in the Rajya Sabha on Thursday said the government should take a holistic approach by coordinating across various ministries and bringing agencies together to tackle the effects of global warming.
Tiruchi Siva of the DMK, Pramod Tiwari of the Congress and Sandosh Kumar P of the Communist Party of India (CPI) raised a "short duration" discussion in the Upper House of Parliament on the serious effects of global warming and the need for remedial steps to tackle those. Initiating the discussion, Siva said global warming is threatening not just India but the entire planet and humanity, and it is time for collective action.
"What is looming above our head is alarming and threatening. I feel that it is not the prerogative of only the Union government, but it is also of the state governments, it is also of the private sector, and it is also of civil society. Everyone in the country, we have our own responsibility," he said. Siva said it is not the sole responsibility of the environment ministry but it has to coordinate with other ministries such as agriculture, urban development, and industries so that a holistic approach is taken as activities in each of these areas have a consequence on the environment.
He also voiced concern over a "recent EIA (environment impact assessment) notification, the Environment Protection Act, the Water Act, the Forest Conservation Act and the Biodiversity Act", saying "all these will result in degradation of the forest. Only protection and extending the forest will save the nation, save the world, save humans".
Expressing concerns over the possibility of many states suffering from more droughts while others being impacted by frequent cyclones and coastal areas facing a threat from rising sea levels, Siva said, "stronger guidelines" are needed from the ministry. Taking part in the discussion, Amee Yajnik of the Congress reiterated the need to enhance India's usage of renewable and clean energy and reduce dependence on fossil fuels while increasing forest cover to meet the net zero target set for 2070.
"All these require a holistic approach. You need to bring all these policies together. Unless and until we do not bring a coordinated effort to bring all these agencies together to have an approach to see that we bring down net zero, this will not fructify," she asserted. Jawhar Sircar of the Trinamool Congress (AITC) said climate change affects the coastal states of the country the most as one of the most immediate effects is the rise in sea levels.
He also expressed concern that the heatwave witnessed from mid-April has led to 5 percent less wheat procurement, while the delayed monsoon that followed has led to a lesser yield of paddy crops. Kavita Patidar of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) cautioned that the melting of glaciers and wildfires are becoming frequent in different parts of the world due to climate change, while the rising sea levels are threatening many coastal cities.