Wednesday, 25 May 2016

GREEN FEATURES ( Feb. 2016)





(1-28) FEB 2016 (Monthly)


GREEN

      FEATURES
                                            

                                              - जलवायु संकट
                                                - आदिवासी विमर्श
                                                 - कृषि और किसानी
                                           - जल दर्शन
                                                      - देशज ज्ञान और स्वस्थ
                                        - विविध


Swaraj represents a genuine attempt to regain control of the 'self' - our self-respect, self-responsibility, and capacities for self-realization - from institutions of dehumanization. As Gandhi states, "It is swaraj when we learn to rule ourselves."   


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विषयवस्तु

जलवायु संकट:
Budget 2016 brings 2 new cesses, hikes environment levy: Times of India
Pollution in India higher than China: Greenpeace
Environment In-Parliament: Loksabha winter session
आदिवासी विमर्श:
Community conservation of forests is successful when women participate
Development plans should not displace forest dwellers, says Prakash Amte
कृषि और किसानी:
"Coffee Farmers Sue Monsanto for Hiding Cancer-Causing Impact of Glyphosate"

Anupam Verma Committee that reviewed 66 pesticides banned elsewhere in the world...

Eye on safety, Govt defers GM mustard decision

Govt gives Rs. 36,000 cr to farm sector; agri-credit at Rs. 9 lakh crore
Farmers oppose land acquisition
जल दर्शन:

Bundelkhand women forge friendships for water

'स्वामी सानंद गंगा संकल्प संवाद' श्रृंखला का शुभारंभ
देशज ज्ञान और स्वस्थ:
INDIA: Ad-hoc action will perpetuate child malnutrition

As in the case of Swachh Bharat, India needs concerted action to beat malnutrition


विशेष

Is Budget 2016 all about ‘Swachh Bharat’ and a rustic touch?




CLIMATE CRISIS जलवायु संकट


Budget 2016 brings 2 new cesses, hikes environment levy
NEW DELHI: Government on Monday proposed Krishi Kalyan Cess and Infrastructure Cess, raised incidence of Environment levy, while deciding to do away with as many as 13 cesses which do not yield more than Rs 50 crore in a year. Krishi Kalyan Cess will be levied on all taxable services at the rate of 0.5 per cent with effect from June 1, 2016, to finance and promote initiatives to improve agriculture, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said in his Budget speech. “Krishi Kalyan Cess on all taxable services will increase service tax rate by 0.5 per cent to 15 per cent,” Nangia & Co Managing Partner Rakesh Nangia. Besides, Infrastructure Cess has been imposed at the rate of 1 per cent on small petrol, LPG, CNG cars, 2.5 per cent on diesel cars of certain capacity and 4 per cent on other higher engine capacity vehicles, SUVs and bigger sedans. However, three wheelers, electrically-operated vehicles, hybrid vehicles, hydrogen vehicles based on fuel cell technology would be exempt from the infrastructure levy Besides, motor vehicles which after clearance have been registered for use solely as taxi, ambulances, cars for physically handicapped persons will also be exempt from this cess.The ‘Oil Industries Development Cess’ will be levied at the rate of 20 per cent, instead of specific rate of Rs 4,500 per metric tonne. “The amendment in the Oil Industry (Development) Act, 1974, will be effective from the date of assent to the Finance Bill, 2016,” the Budget said. Further, in order to reduce multiplicity of taxes, associated cascading and to reduce cost of collection, Jaitley also abolished 13 cesses, levied by various ministries in which revenue collection is less than Rs 50 crore in a year. (Times of India 29/2/16)


Pollution in India higher than China: Greenpeace
New Delhi: The green NGO said India’s NAQI network with 39 operating stations also compares poorly with the 1,500 stations in China. India has overtaken China’s air pollution levels in 2015 and the average particulate matter exposure was higher for the first time in the 21st century, a Greenpeace analysis of NASA satellite data has shown. “For the first time this century, the average particulate matter exposure was higher for Indian citizens than that of Chinese people. “China’s strong measures to curb pollution have contributed to the biggest year-on-year air quality improvement on record while in contrast, India’s pollution levels continued a decade-long increase to reach the highest level on record,” Greenpeace India said in a statement. It said as per World Health Organization (WHO), India is home to 13 out of 20 most polluted cities in the world with deteriorating air pollution levels in the past decade, particularly in North India. Greenpeace, in its National Air Quality Index (NAQI) ranking report, had earlier said that as many as 15 out of 17 Indian cities with NAQI stations showed levels of air pollution that far exceeded the prescribed Indian standards. The report had also revealed that 23 of the 32 stations across India are showing more than 70 per cent exceedance of the national standards, putting public health at risk. Greenpeace observed that the most important aspect to fight air pollution is a robust system to curb air pollution in public domain that empowers people to take action to safeguard their health and the government to issue red alerts during bad air days and take policy decisions in the long term. The green NGO said India’s NAQI network with 39 operating stations also compares poorly with the 1,500 stations in China. “The satellite images until 2005 showed India’s pollution, while serious, was lot lower than eastern China’s. In 2015, India particulate pollution stands higher than that of China, after increasing at an average rate of 2 per cent over the past decade,” it said. (The Hindu 22/2/16)


Environment In-Parliament
- Parliament Committee asks environment ministry to form new committee for review of environment laws
http://www.indiaenvironmentportal.org.in/reports-documents/high-level-committee-report-review-various-acts-administered-ministry-environment

This report tabled by Parliamentary standing committee on Science and Technology in the Rajya Sabha has asked the Ministry of Enviroment and Forests to appoint a new high-level committee to review environmental law


Featured Policy

- Green highways policy : 1% project cost to be set aside to plant trees
http://www.indiaenvironmentportal.org.in/content/415319/green-highways-plantation-maintenance-policy-2015/ 

 

आदिवासी विमर्श


Community conservation of forests is successful when women participate
Van Panchayats have only been successful in conserving their forests with the enthusiastic participation of women. This is how to increase women's leadership in forest conservation.
Development plans should not displace forest dwellers, says Prakash Amte
Bidar: Prakash Amte, Magsaysay Award winning doctor who works for the welfare of the tribal population in Maharashtra, feels that development plans should not displace forest dwellers. “They have been living in jungles for hundreds of years. Who are we to say they have to move away from their native environment? Any development plan should involve and engage them. No such scheme should even think of relocating tribals and forest dwelling communities,” he told The Hindu . He was reacting to the concerns expressed by some non-governmental organisations that forest development and mining policies by some State governments envisaged relocation of tribal population to make way for industries and other development initiatives. “Some development plans, mining policies and even afforestation schemes are built around the idea that tribals and jungle communities should be displaced. This is a wrong perception. Forests and communities have coexisted for generations and each has contributed to the survival of the other. That symbiosis should not be disturbed,” Mr. Amte said. “Governments come up with such plans as they are all drafted in New Delhi or the State headquarters. Planning should not be imposed form the top. It should sprout in the ground and climb up,” he said. “There are various political parties in the country and they have a lot of differences over policies and programmes. But they are all united on some points. For example, issues like environment protection or family planning or comprehensive health care, are not on their agenda. They have no clear stand on such issues. When it comes to environment, parties neither make their stand clear nor announce their policies. When in power, they approve plans and clear projects related to environment without studying the issues fully and without bothering about their implications,” Mr. Amte said. “It is difficult to find doctors who are willing to work in rural areas or small towns. That is not a problem limited to Maharashtra or Karnataka. It is a problem across the country. The solution lies not in making it compulsory for doctors to serve in rural areas, but to convince them by motivating them about the need to do so,” he said. Mr. Amte feels that Karnataka’s experiment of mandating rural service for MBBS graduates might not achieve success. “When they complete their medical degrees, most are young and unmarried. They can spend two years serving the poor rural folk, before returning to the city for further education or professional practice. They should be made to realise that they will be as benefited as the society they are serving, if they do so,” he said. Mr. Amte also said that rural service could be incentivised for young doctors by offering them postgraduate seats in the subjects of their choice. He feels that the government should work towards making their stay in villages hassle free by providing proper infrastructure in hospitals, power supply, equipment for investments and diagnosis and residential quarters. “Some doctors feel that a large portion of work in a rural hospital is clerical. That should change. Doctors should be freed from such work and given more free time to treat patients,” the 68-year-old doctor who has served tribal communities for 42 years in Hemalkasa village in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra, said. Mr. Amte and his wife and fellow crusader Mandakini Amte are here to receive the Gurubasava Award . (The Hindu 22/2/16)


कृषि और किसानी


"Coffee Farmers Sue Monsanto for Hiding Cancer-Causing Impact of Glyphosate"
This organophosphorus compound, Glyphosate was introduced to the market by Monsanto in the 1970s, as a broad-spectrum weedicide - ROUNDUP.  Then they introduced genetically  engineered crops that would not suffer under the application of toxic Glyphosphate, and called
these crops "Roundup-Ready".  

Agri-Biotech companies have often peddled these kind of combinations as a "solution" to increased weed & pest attacks resulting from warmer farms due to global warming.  The GW impacts are real, but these "toxic solutions" are dangerous.  Can a chemical so toxic to plants (after all, weeds are that too) be totally harmless to humans & other foraging animals ?
                                                                                                                                      -- Soumya dutta

 

Anupam Verma Committee that reviewed 66 pesticides banned elsewhere in the world...

(Minutes of 361st  Special Meeting of RC held on 22nd December, 2015)

The Govt's reply in the Lok Sabha on "use of banned pesticides" in 08.12.2015: The following are the main recommendations, it appears:

(a) whether the Government is aware that many hazardous pesticides like chlorpyrifos, phorate, monocrotophos and neonicotinoid which are banned or restricted in the countries of origin are still being imported for being used in the agriculture sector adversely affecting the human health, soil, livestock and environment;

(b) if so, the details thereof along with the reasons therefor and the corrective action taken by the Government in this regard;

(c) whether the number of samples having pesticides and harmful chemicals above the permitted Maximum Residue Level (MRL) in fruits, vegetables, meat and spices is on the rise; and

(d) if so, the details thereof along with the steps taken by the Government for judicious and proper use of pesticides including ''Grow Safe Food'' campaign and promoting the use of bio-fertilizers in the country?
answer by minister of agriculture and farmers welfare

a) & (b): The Registration Committee constituted under the provisions of the Insecticides Act, 1968 registers pesticides only after establishing their safety to human, animal and environmental health. Technical reviews are carried out from time to time and continued use of pesticides is permitted only if found safe. There are 66 pesticides which are banned / restricted in other countries of the world including USA and Europe but are permitted for use in India (Annexure - I). The reasons for permitting use of any pesticide in any country depends upon prevalence of pests, diseases and weeds situation in its agro-climatic conditions; prevalence of vector borne diseases and their control strategies; geography and other ecological factors and ecosystem of the country; socioeconomic conditions and availability of alternatives. A Committee of Experts under the Chairmanship of Dr. Anupam Verma has been constituted to review these 66 pesticides including chlorpyriphos, phorate and monocrotophos for their continued use in the country. The report of the committee is awaited. Apart from this, the committee had also been given the mandate to review neonicotinoids. The committee has submitted a Report with respect to neonicotinoid class of pesticides. The Committee has inter alia recommended that use of neonicotinoids may be allowed with instructions to not spray during flowering stage of the crop; inclusion of appropriate residue/toxicology parameters in registration requirement, and further studies on bio-efficacy and toxicity.

(c) & (d): Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare has started a central sector scheme, “Monitoring of Pesticide Residues at National level” under which samples of food commodities are collected and analysed for the presence of pesticide residues.
The year wise details of samples analysed are at Annexure II. The percentage samples of spices above MRL have decreased in the last years, whereas, for the same period, the percentage samples of vegetables above MRL have remained stagnant. No samples of Meat have been found above MRL in the last three years. The percentage samples of fruits above MRL have increased from 1.2% in 2012-13 to 1.8% in 2014-15.

The Central Government conducts Farmers Field Schools and other Human Resource Development programmes through Central Integrated Pest Management Centres in States and UTs to sensitize various stakeholders regarding safe and judicious use of pesticides, etc. A ‘Grow Safe Food’ campaign has been initiated to carry the message of safe and judicious use of pesticides to farmers and other stakeholders. A simple message on the five essential principles of judicious pesticide use viz., application of pesticides on the right crop, against pests for which the pesticide has been approved, at the right time, in approved doses, and as per approved method of application-is sought to be conveyed through hoardings, banners etc. in regional languages in Gram panchayats and rural areas. In addition, annual reports of “Monitoring of Pesticide Residues at National level” are shared with States to help them to take focussed action against pesticides misuse. Under Mission for Integrated Development of Horticulture (MIDH), the Central Government provides financial subsidies for use of liquid bio-fertilizers such as Rhizobium/Azospirillum etc.
Anupam Verma Committee
Agenda item No. 3.1 -  Consideration of report of the Expert Committee under the Chairmanship of Dr. anupam Verma to review  66 pesticides which are currently banned/restricted/withdrawn in one or more countries but continue to be registered in the country:


Eye on safety, Govt defers GM mustard decision

Will not halt research but not rushing through decision, says Javadekar.
http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-news-india/eye-on-safety-govt-defers-gm-mustard-decision/


 A protest against GM mustard outside the Ministry of Environment, Forests & Climate Change, Friday. (Express photo by Praveen Khanna)

HELPING THE government buy peace with activists protesting against granting clearance to the first transgenic food crop in the country, the biotechnology regulator on Friday deferred a decision on allowing the cultivation of a genetically-modified (GM) hybrid mustard.
The Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC), a body under the Environment Ministry that regulates the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), asked the developer of the hybrid mustard — Centre for Genetic Manipulation of Crop Plants — at Delhi University, led by former vice-chancellor Deepak Pental, to provide some more information on bio-safety related data.
The GM variant, called DMH11 (Dhara Mustard Hybrid 11), is said to deliver 25-30 per cent higher mustard-seed yields compared to the best “check” varieties currently being grown in the country.
The hybrid went through Biosafety Research Level-1 (BRL-1) tests in 2011-12 and 2012-13, in Rajasthan, under the coordination of the National Research Centre for Rapeseed-Mustard at Bharatpur, and BRL-2 tests at the Indian Agriculture Research Institute in Delhi and the Punjab Agricultural University in the 2014-15 season.
“The necessary field trials have already been done and we have submitted all bio-safety related data to the regulator,” Pental said.
The institute sought a final approval from the GEAC in December for “environmental release” of the crop. But even before the application process was initiated, anti-GM NGOs and activists cutting across ideological lines — from the Left to RSS-affiliated organisations — began protests, in a recreation of the agitation against Bt brinjal, also a GM crop, in 2010.
They were joined by a number of scientists from several institutions and even Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia who wrote a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi demanding that the process be halted.
Incidentally, the approval for BRL-2 tests of DMH11 was given by the Delhi government in November 2014, when the capital was under President’s Rule.
On Friday, the activists gathered around the Environment Ministry building as the GEAC met in the morning. Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar later assured them that no decision would be taken without “due consideration and consultation”.
In 2010, Bt brinjal had got the final approval from the GEAC but the then Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh put an indefinite moratorium on that decision which still holds. In the case of Mustard DMH11, the GEAC put off its decision by at least a few months.
Javadekar said that while the government would not stop scientific research, it would not take any decision in haste.
“We are not rushing through any decision. We need to increase production and productivity in agriculture. We need to give emphasis on science, development, productivity and increased production. But at the same time, we have to be scientific and not risk the lives of our people. So, every decision will be taken only after due deliberation,” he said.
He also indicated that the introduction of GM crops would happen only if other avenues of increasing production were not available. “We cannot let our people starve. But if there are other good alternatives available…our Prime Minister has repeatedly talked about organic farming, and using biotechnology in agriculture. But at the same time, scientific methods are also important,” he said.
The GEAC prepared a time-bound “roadmap” for taking a final decision on DMH11 mustard that involves holding public consultations as well. If the roadmap is followed, the hybrid would be back to the GEAC for approval by the end of May.
Pental said he would provide all the new clarifications that have been sought from him. He said he was also willing to put all the biosafety data in the public domain once the GEAC gives the final approval.
“There is no attempt to keep data secret as some people have been alleging. I will surely make all data public. But that cannot happen before the final approval,” he said.


Govt gives Rs. 36,000 cr to farm sector; agri-credit at Rs. 9 lakh crore 

New Delhi: Aiming to double farmers income by 2022, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today announced an allocation of nearly 36,000 crore for the farm sector while raising the agri-credit target to 9 lakh crore for the next fiscal. He also allocated 15,000 crore for interest subvention on the farm credit, 5,500 crore for the new crop insurance scheme and 500 crore to boost pulses output. Jaitley also said that a unified agricultural market will be launched on April 14 and soil health cards will be provided to all 14 crore farmers by March 2017. “We are grateful to our farmers for being the backbone of the country’s food security. We need to think beyond food security and give back to our farmers a sense of income security,” Jaitley said while unveiling Budget 2016-17 in Lok Sabha today. The government would reorient its intervention in the farm and non-farm sector to double the income of farmers by 2022, he added. “Our total allocation on agriculture and farmers welfare is 35,984 crore,” Jaitley said. Asserting that a special focus has been given to ensure adequate and timely flow of credit to farmers, the minister said: “Against the target of 8.5 lakh crore in 2015-16, the target of agricultural credit in 2016-17 will be all-time high of 9 lakh crore.”To reduce the burden of loan repayment on farmers, he said a provision of 15,000 crore has been made in the budgetary estimate of 2016-17 towards interest subvention. Jaitley said the government has provided a path breaking crop insurance scheme called the Prime Minister Fasal Bima Yojana, for which 5,500 crore has been allocated for effective implementation in 2016-17. Stating that irrigation is critical for increasing the agricultural production and productivity, he said, “the Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sichai Yojana has been strengthened and implemented in mission mode.” He said 28.5 lakh hectare will be brought under irrigation under this scheme. A dedicated long-term irrigation fund will be created in NABARD with an initial corpus of 20,000 crore to build irrigation facilities, Jaitley said. “Implementation of 89 irrigation projects under Accelerated Irrigation Benefits Programme (AIBP), which have been languishing, will be fast—tracked,” he said, adding that this would help to irrigate 80.6 lakh hectare. (Business Line 29/2/16)


Farmers oppose land acquisition 

Ludhiana: The project of linking Southern bypass with Ladhowal bypass may take longer as several farmers and residents of villages whose land is being acquired have decided to protest against acquisition of their land. Land of seven villages is to be acquired for the project and the notification has already been issued for the same. A notice for the acquisition of land by the National Highway Authority of India was published on October 12, 2015 seeking objections. Thereafter the residents of some of the villages had filed their objections with the sub-divisional magistrate. “Our objections have not been properly heard by the authorities and no satisfactory action has been taken. Why is it that the entire acquisition is done on one side of the road and not both the sides in line with the general practice. This would cause a loss to one side whereas the other side would benefit. We will loose our house and this will affect us badly,” said Ajay who is living with his mother Sarla Aggarwal and family in Malakpur village. Karnail Singh, a resident of the same village, informed that he is a farmer and his land is being acquired. “If my farm land is acquired, I would be left with no other option but to beg as this is my bread and butter. We are informing the authorities but they are not paying any heed to what we are saying. Our land needs to be exempted from the project,” he said. Karamjeet Singh, sarpanch of Malakpur, said their land should be exempted as farmers cannot do without their lands. “Many of the farmers even do not know that their lands are being acquired. These farmers should either be given lands or should be given compensation according to the new acquisition laws that were passed giving four times market price of the property,” he said. Advocate Harpreet Singh Sandhu said as a reminder they have filed a petition in the SDM office apprising the office that they have not been called or heard by the National High Way Authority of India in line with notice given by them for seeking objections from the land or property owners. “I do not have the competence to do anything on their complaint and therefore I have forwarded their objections to the project officer concerned in National Highway Authority of India,” said SDM Ludhiana West Richa. When asked about the concerns of the farmers and the residents whose land was being acquired for Ladhowal Bypass, deputy chief minister Sukhbir Singh Badal said, “In Punjab, we have always protected the rights and interests of the farmers and we would ensure that the interest of these affected farmers are also protected.” (Times of India 28/2/16)


जल दर्शन

 

Bundelkhand women forge friendships for water

Women are not only responsible for water but they also face the brunt of water scarcity. Watch the video to find out what happens when these women become 'Jal Sahelis' (water friends).

 

              Water Literacy campaign for Jal Sahelis (Source: Parmarth Samaj Sevi Sansthan)

Sirkoo, a 39 year old woman in Bundelkhand, Uttar Pradesh, walked 8 km every day to fetch water. As a woman, it was obviously her responsibility to ensure the household's water availability. This put an additional stress on her already depleted health as well as time--until she decided to tackle the issue head on.
Three years ago, she and a few other women came together to form an informal water committee or ‘Paani Panchayat’ to work on water issues which is what affected them the most. Their agenda was simple – ensure water availability for all through the creation and conservation of water resources in their villages, so that water was available as a basic right. With the help of a local organisation called the Parmarth Samaj Sevi Sansthan, they began to take steps in this direction. 

'स्वामी सानंद गंगा संकल्प संवाद' श्रृंखला का शुभारंभ



प्रो जी डी अग्रवाल जी से स्वामी ज्ञानस्वरूप सानंद जी का नामकरण हासिल गंगापुत्र की एक पहचान आई आई टी, कानपुर के सेवानिवृत प्रोफेसर, राष्ट्रीय नदी संरक्षण निदेशालय के पूर्व सलाहकार, केन्द्रीय प्रदूषण नियंत्रण बोर्ड के प्रथम सचिव, चित्रकूट स्थित ग्रामोदय विश्वविद्यालय में अध्यापन और पानी-पर्यावरण इंजीनियरिेग के नामी सलाहकार के रूप में है, तो दूसरी पहचान गंगा के लिए अपने प्राणों को दांव पर लगा देने वाले सन्यासी की है। जानने वाले, गंगापुत्र स्वामी ज्ञानस्वरूप सानंद को ज्ञान, विज्ञान और संकल्प के एक संगम की तरह जानते हैं।



देशज ज्ञान और स्वस्थ


INDIA: Ad-hoc action will perpetuate child malnutrition
If the government does not take charge of the problem of child malnutrition, others will take advantage of the vacuum. Powerful international players ready to feed on hunger have their foot in the door. When all is done and dusted, the Modi government’s claims to success will be judged against India’s darkest distended underbelly, its millions of malnourished children. And, the key for the government lies in its ability to replace ad hoc action with coordination, to lower the numbers of all forms of child undernutrition, and not in trying to treat malnutrition with ready-to-use foods. Today, India still has more malnourished children than any other country. The National Family Health Survey-3 (2005) found that 42.5% of children under five years old are underweight. The recently released Rapid Survey on Children (RSOC), conducted by UNICEF and the Government of India, has found that this figure is now closer to 30%. Statistically speaking, this is good news. From nearly every second Indian child being underweight, now only around every third child is so. Still, the bad news is 40 million children remain undernourished. India still has a greater percentage of underweight children than the continent of Africa, where the figures stands at 21%. These Indian children are chronically undernourished. In the lead up to the last national elections, and since taking power, Mr. Modi has often spoken about India’s strength being its “demographic dividend”. But, if a large section of this dividend, i.e. the future of India and Indian growth, are growing up stunted, sickly, and underweight, the returns are bound to be poor. And, it is certainly not only a question of economics. The choices that another undernourished generation will make in a democracy will affect not only the entire Indian society, but given the numbers, the region and the wider integrated world. For its part, the incumbent Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government did promise to address malnutrition before the election. The Party Election Manifesto stated the following:    “One of our main targets will be to eradicate the curse of malnutrition. We will do so by revamping existing programmes and launching a multi-pronged war against malnutrition across the nation, especially in the under-developed areas, with the help of State Governments. All resources will be provided to achieve this goal.” These pleasing words are fit for a manifesto. They sound determined. But, what is the reality one year after the BJP assumed power? … (Asian Human Rights Commission 26/2/16)

As in the case of Swachh Bharat, India needs concerted action to beat malnutrition



विशेष

Is Budget 2016 all about ‘Swachh Bharat’ and a rustic touch?

Experts opine on whether the water and sanitation sector got a meaningful budget push this year. 

 

Drinking water source in a village at Kawardha, Chhattisgarh
s this year’s budget a mere continuation of the trajectory set last year in social sectors like drinking water, sanitation, employment guarantee and agriculture? Is the budgetary outlay for urban development responsive towards the drinking water and sanitation needs of vulnerable sections of society such as the urban poor and women? Does the budget hold appeal for India's rural poor?
We talked to a range of experts to understand if farm and social sector spending on programmes like Swachh Bharat Mission and National Rural Drinking Water Programme has been upped or just hyped? Some say that Central Government spending on major welfare ministries and key social sector schemes has plummeted while others feel that the increase has been particularly dramatic for some key social sectors like agriculture and irrigation, which seems to have received the lion’s share of allocation.
Sanitising India through Swachh Bharat Mission: Did it go the whole hog or was it a dampener?
There is an enhanced outlay in this year’s budget for the Prime Minister’s pet programme Swachh Bharat Mission, which aims to make India open defecation free by 2019. This year’s allocation at Rs. 9000 crore is two and half times that of the previous year. If the need arises, the budget has provisions for enabling a levy--Swachh Bharat cess--at a rate of 2% or less on all or certain services. Is this a good enough boost for a programme that aims to construct 11.11 crore individual household latrines in the country?
“The government’s enhanced outlay is very welcome”, says Rohini Nilekani, Chairperson, Arghyam. “Clearly, it will not be enough to fulfill the aspiration of giving every household a latrine. Moreover, unless the government’s own processes for giving the subsidy are re-engineered and streamlined, the rate of toilet building even where people want one, may not pick up satisfactorily. But most importantly, we need more funds allocated to creating future-proofed sanitation infrastructure that takes care of the waste stream in cost-effective, sustainable and safe ways. This calls for more research, innovation and swift implementation with a decentralised approach. It is unclear if the governments at all the three levels are committed to this approach. It will be a public health nightmare if poor pit and septic tank construction further contaminates the groundwater or surface water in dense settlements”, Nilekani adds.
How has the government performed in its engagement towards sanitising India through its flagship Swachh Bharat Mission in the last year? Trisha Agarwala from the Centre for Budget and Governance Accountability (CBGA), a New Delhi based public policy think tank says, “The government has surely gone the whole hog towards sanitising India through its Swachh Bharat Mission as evident from the increased allocations in the states. More than 122 lakh toilets have already been constructed in rural areas so far under the Mission. Sanitation coverage, which stood at 40.6% as per NSSO data, has risen to around 48.8% as on December 31 2015, as reported by the Economic Survey 2015-16.”
Toilet construction does not necessarily lead to increased usage and behaviour change
The Centre’s move last year following the 14th Finance Commission was that revenue expenditure for Swachh Bharat Mission would be now borne by the states. It was thus important to understand the funding pattern, and whether overall expenditure of the centre and states will decrease or increase. CBGA with the support of Arghyam, recently conducted a study in seven states to track policy and budgetary commitments for drinking water and sanitation. The study showed that the political will towards sanitation has been present uniformly across the states. A case in point is Odisha, which had low sanitation indicators but since the launch of the Swachh Bharat Mission, allocations for sanitation has increased manifold. Jayamala Subramaniam, CEO, Arghyam notes, “There is a need to follow the money from the district and below in order to develop specific advocacy messaging in relation to implementing practices on the ground”.
As far as school sanitation goes, an article in Business Standard indicated that the government was unable to achieve its target of providing toilets to every school by August 15, 2015 through the Department of School Education’s specially launched Swachh Bharat Swachh Vidyalaya programme.
How has the Swachh Bharat Mission performed in its urban component? “Urban sanitation has definitely got a renewed focus through the Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban). Most allocations for sanitation have shown a rise due to the new allocation for urban sanitation. However, Tamil Nadu has lower allocations compared to other states. This could also be because of the state’s own schemes for sanitation”, notes Agarwala.
A lot remains to be done to make the programme focus on preventive health care and generate awareness and not just on hygiene and cleanliness as asserted by the Finance Minister in his last year’s Budget Speech. Dr. Manjur Ali, CBGA notes, “Evidence shows that toilets are being constructed usually in areas which already have existing water supply connections. This leaves out a large section of the population who live in unauthorised colonies. Toilet construction amounts to a large part of the expenditure accounted for in the Swachh Bharat Mission. This should also simultaneously lead to increased usage and behavior change. Monitoring the usage and maintenance of toilets is crucial to assessing the success of the programme. Sustainability of toilets and slip-back in sanitation behavior needs to be looked into. One hopes that the Swachh Bharat Mission would solve the problem of open defecation by 2019 provided it does not become another Total Sanitation Campaign, in terms of states trying to achieve targets by increasing toilet construction with scant concern on toilet usage and sustainability.”

Rural drinking water component misses attention yet again
Budget 2016-17 has been a dampener in its rural drinking water component with the allocation of Rs. 5000 crore for the National Rural Drinking Water Programme being only a marginal improvement over the previous year’s allocation of Rs 4373 crores. “Surely, after the states raised a hue and cry with the reduced allocations last year, the government stepped up the allocations through the Supplementary Budget; however, the amount is still less, if one compares it to the earlier year’s budget for rural water. Hence, one is bound to ask whether the increase in sanitation allocations have come at the cost of reduced allocations to drinking water”, says Agarwala. “Most of the coverage targets have been met as per the IMIS of the Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation, however, slip back habitations and sustainability of water sources is an issue. Due to groundwater depletion there is a switch now to surface water sources. Despite the focus on fluoride and arsenic as water quality contaminant issues, other water contaminants like iron also need to be looked into”, she adds.


Capital investments in urban water supply; local water sources ignored
In the urban context, the Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation (AMRUT), the erstwhile Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) is the national flagship programme driving capital investments in water supply. How has the programme performed last year? Was it able to push for governance reforms by urban local bodies and state governments? This year’s budget for AMRUT and for 100 smart cities is Rs. 7296 crore.
“Because smart cities is a dream project of the government, its attention is likely to be on this. AMRUT is more or less like the former JNNURM whose experience suggests that the emphasis is on drawing water from exogenous sources instead of developing and managing local water sources. AMRUT also denies free water provisioning for the poor and pushes for water privatisation through the route of Public Private Partnerships. The project costs spiral as a result and the poor consumers have to bear the burden. In Madhya Prdesh under AMRUT and its predecessor JNNURM, only a fourth of the 114 approved projects have been completed over the years”, says Rehmat of Manthan Adhyayan Kendra, Badwani. 
“All public buildings need to have modern sanitation as a priority. All government offices, transport stands, schools, etc need adequate funds to build and operate modern hygienic sanitary infrastructure”, says Nilekani. “Most disappointingly, the government is doing nothing on a permanent basis to prevent the Indian Railways from democratically spreading disease around the country with its hole in the floor toilets. And until that project is complete, we can never have Swachh Bharat", she adds.


Rural employment and irrigation: Do they continue to face a fund pinch?
This year Rs. 38500 crore has been allocated for Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) and this constitutes about 44% of the year’s budget of the Ministry of Rural Development (MoRD). While this constitutes a raise of 11%, the allocation is not as much considering the rise in inflation, and it still remains way below the figures for 2010-11. The Ministry’s budget has in turn been raised by around 10.7% when compared to last year. Will this budget hike boost rural employment?
The MGNREGS scheme, the previous government’s employment generation flagship scheme and dubbed as a monumental failure by the present Prime Minister, gives a legal guarantee of 100 working days to rural, unskilled adults. Though the MoRD had last year insisted on an additional allocation of Rs 5000 crore to maintain the momentum of MGNREGS as promised in Budget 2015-16, the government did not yield. Non-availability of funds and considerable delay in receipt of wages continue to plague the programme. Many states had spent the money allocated and were staring at a negative balance of payments due to a shortage of funds. Long unpaid material payments and overdue wages for workers to the tune of Rs. 5972 crore as per official records was pervasive at a time when drought was staring at most parts of the country. Figures state that the proportion of payment delays was as high as 72% in 2014-15, discouraging people from demanding work.
Per Accountability India, “MGNREGA has had a significant impact in raising standards of living, nutrition levels, school enrolments, etc. Cutting funds would surely bring down the performance of the programme (if it has not already done so) and its impact on development itself”. Hence, there is a need to ensure that funds do not run out and that compensation is paid to beneficiaries for delayed payments so as to ensure the standing of the Employment Guarantee Act, a constitutionally demand-driven scheme. Else, the programme would become an allocation-driven scheme instead.
Irrigation, another aspect of agriculture seems to have been highlighted in the ‘rural’ centered Budget 2016-17. The push includes the decision to fast track the irrigation projects that have been languishing under the Accelerated Irrigation Benefits Programme. A dedicated long term irrigation fund will be created in NABARD with an initial corpus of about Rs. 20000 crore through budgetary support and market borrowings.
A major programme for sustainable management of groundwater resources has been prepared with an estimated cost of Rs. 6000 crore and proposed for multilateral funding. “However, only about Rs. 5717 crore has been allotted for the much acclaimed Prime Ministers Krishi Sinchai Yojana and the total funds allocated for irrigation amounts to just Rs. 11434 crore. Last year’s allocation for the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare of Rs. 25917 crore has been upped to Rs. 35984 crore but this is far too less”, says Rehmat of Manthan Adhyayan Kendra. The budget speech highlighted the need to look beyond ‘food security’ and focus on ‘income security’.
Though the Government has promised to reorient its interventions in the farm and non-farm sectors to double the income of the farmers by 2022, it remains to be seen whether this translates into reality on the ground. The Prime Minister's Fasal Bima Yojana, the new crop insurance scheme that has got a budget outlay of Rs. 5500 crore holds promise if effectively implemented. Under this, the farmer will pay a nominal amount of insurance premium and get a reasonable compensation in the event of any loss suffered.
In all, this year’s budget looks like a mixed bag as far as the farm and social sector goes. An analysis by Yamini Aiyar of Accountability Initiative suggests that social sector investment in Budget 2016 is no different than the previous year. A lot remains to be done to factor in the Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) context, given India’s international commitments--especially the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

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