Friday, May 16, 2014

Air Pollution kills!

I had traveled twice into West Bengal during the last six months or so. I would fly into Kolkata and drive down to Kharagpur. On both occasions, I was amazed and frightened by the amount of smoke one sees arising from fires lit on either side of the highway in the open fields. Air pollution is no longer an urban problem only. Thoughtless burning of agricultural waste in India could very well be a significant contributor to global warming, apart from being a cause of a number of health problems. 

Meanwhile, in our apartment building in Bangalore, we have been fighting fires being set every year to wild plant growth in a neighboring plot of Government land. So, three of us from the building worked to create a petition on the site Change.org (links given below). We need your help to get it off the ground. Will you take 30 seconds to sign it right now? You can sign our petition by clicking here.

The petition reads as follows: 

To: The Chief Minister of Karnataka, Shri Siddaramaiah,


Please ban burning of garbage and garden/hospital waste within city limits all over Karnataka, particularly by Government offices, parks and hospitals. Such burning endangers the health of millions." 

Here's why it's important:
The Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981 provides authority to State Governments to ban burning of any material if it is likely to cause air pollution.
Despite this, burning of garden waste continues in most cities of India. Government offices, institutions and hospitals have vast areas of open urban land under their control, and are the most prominent garden waste burners. Municipality/ Corporation workers entrusted with sweeping and collecting of waste including garden waste set fire to heaps of garbage. Municipal parks also burn garden waste. Many hospitals burn hospital waste carelessly, creating dangerous pollution. The smelly smoke arising from fires of hospital waste gives an indication of the toxic fumes that are released.  The problem is particularly acute in places such as Bangalore, due to the added burdens of high population density and vehicular pollution.
The dangers of air pollution are well known. A News Release from the World Health Organization dated 25 March 2014 is titled “7 million premature deaths annually linked to air pollution”. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2014/air-pollution/en/   It goes on to give the estimate that one in eight deaths world-wide are due to air pollution.
We urge you to prohibit the burning of garden waste as well as garbage within city limits, and make this a cognizable offence with immediate effect.  Please empower fire stations to enforce the no-burning rule and file First Information Reports. This is a simple measure that will improve the quality of life in our cities and reduce healthcare costs.  Please instruct government offices, institutions and parks to implement composting of garden waste. 

Srinivasan Ramani               Meera Joshi                   Amla Sirsi
You can sign our petition by clicking here. Thanks! 

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