Yearender
Eco-conditions in Taj Trapezium Zone deteriorate
TAJ MAHAL STILL FAR FROM BEING SAFE
FROM AIR POLLUTION
The Taj Mahal is neither safe from air
pollution nor water pollution. Environmentalists in Agra agree, the war against pollution has
been lost for want of commitment and will power at the highest level of
governance.
A quarter century after the historic Supreme Court intervention in
the PIL filed by MC Mehta to secure the 17th century monument of
love Taj Mahal in Agra ,
from environmental pollution, conditions remain almost the same, with hardly
any discernible change in the eco-sensitive Taj Trapezium Zone.
The air quality has gone worse from being poor, as Agra continued
to be among the top polluted cities in India on pollution index chart whole of
2018.The dust level has gone up and the share of noxious gases in the ambient
air dangerously high. Though a slew of
development projects and pollution abatement measures have been announced and
partly implemented, the results reflect poorly, even as the city continues to
participate in the smart city race.
Neither the pollution standards applicable in eco-sensitive zones
have been achieved nor has the city made any progress in extending the green
cover. The forest area has in fact come down to a meager six percent or less,
against the national target of 33 percent. The suspended particulate matter
(SPM) level remains over 350 micrograms per cubic metre, going above 600 in
summer, against the 100 microgram standard. The level of noxious gases has
continued to rise as a result of automobile explosion. “In the early 1980s when
Firozabad was part of Agra district, the number of registered
vehicles was only 40,000. But now the number has crossed a million in Agra district alone. Add Firozabad , Mathura
and neighbouring Hathras districts, the scenario is frightening,” said green
activist Shravan Kumar Singh.
It is strange that despite continuous monitoring by the apex court
and the NGT, the overall environmental scenario in the Taj Trapezium Zone, has
not shown any positive change. Rather the conditions continue to remain
alarming, says River Connect Campaign activist Dr Devashish Bhattacharya. “The
river Yamuna is virtually dead in Agra .
The dry river-bed, and the highly polluted water that flows down the river pose
serious threats to historical monuments along the banks. More than two decades
of judicial activism, major policy pronouncements and projects worth millions
of rupees, this Taj city remains pock-marked with mounds of garbage. Air and
water pollution threaten the health of people and the world famous monuments
that is visited by millions of tourists every year,” Bhattacharya adds.
The SPM rises as the river bed runs dry and the Rajasthan desert
gradually expands into Uttar Pradesh. In recent years, there has also been
large-scale mining in the Aravali ranges, pushing up particulate matter in the
air.
In 1993, disposing of a public suit filed by eco-lawyer M.C.
Mehta, a Supreme Court bench headed by Justice Kuldip Singh ordered
far-reaching structural changes to make the 10,000 sq km eco-sensitive Taj
Trapezium Zone safe for heritage monuments in Agra. The measures to be taken were based on
the 20-odd recommendations of a high-powered committee headed by eminent
scientist S. Varadarajan.
Heritage conservationist Surendra Sharma laments “top officials of
various departments have collectively played a crude joke on Agra . We neither have water, nor power; the
sewage system does not work, community ponds have disappeared; trees have been
chopped up; and the Yamuna continues to wail and scream. Nothing has changed,
conditions have worsened."
If you move around the city, a strange stink will hit you in the
face. “That is because the sewer system doesn’t work efficiently. In old city
areas one sees sewer overflowing and untreated waste flowing into municipal
drains that open into the river Yamuna. The STPs hardly work. "Against an
installed capacity of 154 million litres daily, the three Sewage Treatment
Plants (STPs) treat not more than 80 MLD (million litres per day) and that too,
not sewage but nullah (drain) water."
When the Supreme Court bench in 1996 ordered a series of
restrictions and projects to cut down environmental pollution in the Taj
Trapezium, there was hope the city would transition to a higher level of sustainable
development, but the directionless lethargic bureaucratic machinery is still
struggling with a vision document that has to be filed in the Supreme Court
next month, said Dr Harendra Gupta, an activist.
Activist Ranjan Sharma adds "the situation is actually worse,
going by pollution control board data. The Yamuna is a sewage canal, and
increased traffic means heightened air pollution. The recommendations of the S.
Varadarajan committee have been forgotten."
The apex court wanted several rows of trees on the western
periphery of the city to filter the dust-laden westerlies that blow from
Rajasthan. That has not happened and greenery here has all but vanished as tall
buildings now stand where community ponds once were. “The builders and
colonizers have grabbed all water bodies to build malls and multi storeyed
buildings. Parks have been encroached upon. In fact the historical monuments
are dwarfed by illegal structures, and no one really bothers,” complained Rahul
Raj, a green activist.
Activists are hopeless. They say the war on pollution here is as
good as lost. Given that authorities are still to even acknowledge the problem,
the question, perhaps, is whether that war ever began.
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