August 10, 2021
The Great Smog of India is in the genre of everything
India is a soft state. Unlike China, top-down directives are unlikely to work.
It’s attractively written with an easy, breezy style. The costs associated with
cleaning up our coal, biomass and oil economies is miniscule when compared with
the likely health impacts of further neglect. This "silent killer" is very much
like inflation. But it would cut the peak loads which push air quality into the
hazardous range during winter. Spread across the affected population of at least
400 million citizens it amounts to just `600 per head — less than the cost of a
tandoori chicken meal for two in a Punjab roadside dhaba. The first three
chapters like a novel with a bottom-up view of what air pollution means to the
ordinary Indian and the havoc it can cause in everyday lives. This is a lucidly
written account of why India is so polluted. The author purposefully dumbs down
the narrative. The wonder is that this paltry sum is considered unaffordable as
a public outlay. Just `240 billion could virtually end pollution on this account
by subsidising the purchase of farm equipment in Punjab, Haryana and Uttar
Pradesh which can cut the stubble, plant the wheat crop and grind the paddy
straw into the soil as desirable, protective mulch for the wheat seeds.Smog is a
North Indian problem caused by the mighty Himalayas which block the dust and
soot, carried by strong winds from as far away as West Asia, from transgressing
into Tibet and thence China.
The short point is there is contradictory evidence
about the load of pollutants imposed from different sources. But simultaneous
action is key on all the four main sources — power generation from big coal
plants and distributed diesel generators used by the rich and by industry to
fill the gaps in electricity supply; private vehicles particularly diesel cars,
trucks and buses; coal-fired industries and the burning of biomass.This would
not however end air pollution in the Gangetic plain.Some of this pollution is
due to the burning of rice stubble in November to clear the fields for the
winter wheat crop.The book is an engaging, albeit rambling forest walk, with the
author happily heading off into side trails, ranging from energy efficiency in
the manufacturing sector to the economic history of agricultural production in
North India; coal mining practices and the structure of the transportation
market. Much of this is because there is an empowered institution — the Reserve
Bank of India which has a performance metric, since 2015, to keep inflation low.
It instantly sets the reader at ease that she is not about to be inundated with
complicated scientific models and graphs about climate change. Air pollution,
the author reminds us, affects the poor the most.Managing air and water
pollution is an executive responsibility.
The Great Smog of India is in the genre
of everything-the-intelligent-person should know about air pollution in India.
Such readers are advised to proceed directly to the last chapter. To the
impatient reader these come as distractions from the main story.Read this in
conjunction with Chapter 2 which is intriguingly titled, "Love in the Time of
Air Pollution". There are other point sources of emission like construction,
industry and transport. This government has the satisfaction that inflation has
reduced during its term and continues to be low. Similarly, nimble, public
sector incubators and "green" equipment supply aggregators, like the Energy
Efficiency Services Limited (EESL) should be networked into a pan-India "green"
manufacturing community, which leads the way to uncover the piles of "gold"
hidden under the pervasive soot.The author points to the dire need for
collective action by citizens to press government into doing more to avoid
people from falling sick — often terminally with lung cancer; becoming prone to
diabetes or deficient in Vitamin D because the healing rays of the sun are often
shaded out by soot particles from burning biomass or poorly maintained
coal-fired power plants — many of which are owned by the public sector. Clearly
this is suboptimal. The way out is to make adequate capital allocations such
that polluters — many of whom are public sector companies, like the oil
companies, which have yet to roll out Bharat VI standard fuel — make the
necessary capital investments and control end-of-pipe pollution emissions. The
existing institutional architecture is weak and relies heavily on direct
intervention by the Supreme Court to achieve this objective. But the title is
just a hook to get the reader down to some serious reading about the sources of
air pollution and the health impacts thereof. We learn for instance that a
million people — around 10 per cent of total deaths — die every year prematurely
due to air pollution.Dealing with pollution requires a similarly empowered
institution whose performance is tied solely to controlling pollution. There is
a great deal of overseas work on the source and health impacts of air pollution
but relatively little about India.As elections near, all political parties race
to appease poor Indians who are the largest voter group.Sanjeev Ahluwalia is
adviser, Observer Research Foundation.The author is wise in limiting his
objectives to build his narrative by aggregating existing literature.The
political economy issue with enhancing the supply of quality public goods (like
clean air) is that they are not as effective for getting votes as reducing the
cost of private goods (food, fuel and fertiliser) for getting votes — the final
metric in a democracy of how and where capital is allocated.Investment
incentives for clean coal and efficient industrial equipment aligned with the
excellent work already done by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency, needs sustained
support. He emphasises that the success and affordability of making better
healthcare marine
cooling equipment Manufacturers accessible to all — on which Prime Minister
Narendra Modi has laid great stress — depends on ensuring that less people fall
ill in the first place. This cloud of death hangs about the northern plains just
below the Himalayan range
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