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epaperbeta.timesofindia/Article.aspx?eid=31804&articlexml=Uma-Bharti-sets-deadline-for-Ganga-polluting-industries-09102014012048 Oct 09 2014 : The Times of India (Mumbai) Uma Bharti sets deadline for Ganga-polluting industries Vishwa Mohan New Delhi: Says She’ll Choose River Over Industry If Given A Choice All polluting industries along the river Ganga will have to set up sensorbased real-time online effluent monitoring system by March 31 next year. The government on Wednesday said it was serious about the deadline with water resources minister Uma Bharti issuing a veiled threat to industries -mend your ways or face the consequences. The government also said that its long-term goal was to implement “zero liquid discharge“ where all the water used by industries could be recycled and re-used. Sending a tough message to polluting units, Bharti said that if she had to choose between the Ganga and industry , she would choose the river unless polluting industries adhere to all environment norms and deadline. Using the analogy of a delivery procedure where a mothers life may be at stake, the minister said she would ideally like both the mother (Ganga) and child (industry) to survive. But, if she has to choose between the two, she would choose “Ma“ (mother Ganga), she said. “If the child (industry) wo uld suck mothers (Ganga) blood, she would prefer the mother to survive“, said Bharti. The minister refrained from using harsh words at a time when industries are voluntarily turning up to hold consultations for finding a solution. Bharti underlined the fact that whatever the government was doing to rejuvenate the Ganga, would serve as a template for all rivers across the country . Her remarks came after several rounds of consultation with representatives of polluting industries. Environment minister Prakash Java dekar and many experts -including Vinod Tare, coordinator of IIT Consortium that is preparing the Ganga River Basin Management Plan and R K Pachauri, director general of TERI and chairman of the UNs IPCC -attended the consultations and pitched for quick action to save the river. The idea of setting up a sensor-based online monitoring system is to reduce human intervention and bring transparency in the process of monitoring which has, so far, failed to stop discharge of untreated industrial waste into various rivers across the country . Under the new system, the industries are required to install “continuous effluent and emission monitoring devices“ at their ends (discharge outlets). The devices would be linked online with State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBs) offices in state capitals and with the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) headquarters in Delhi. It will allow the central pollution watchdog to monitor the discharges from the industries on realtime basis. Times View: The ministers tough stance on severely polluting industries along the Ganga is indeed welcome. She should however not restrict it to this river alone. The vast majority of Indias rivers and water bodies face appalling levels of pollution and action on them cannot be taken sequentially. It must be done simultaneously. The message must go out clearly to all polluters ¬ clean up or shut down. The environment ministry must also buttress this with a similarly uncompromising stance on all forms of pollution.
Posted on: Thu, 09 Oct 2014 11:21:25 +0000

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