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SPOTLIGHT AGENCIES
Nobel cause
murali772 - 8 December, 2007 | Traffic | Bangalore | Nano | public transport
Dr Rajendra Pachauri, the Chairman of the Nobel Laureate, IPCC, when asked to comment on the TATA '1- lakh car' project, in the context of the adverse remarks made by the famed economist, Thomas Friedman (addressing a meeting of the Bangalore International Centre), expressed his wish that TATA's would simultaneously get into public bus transport services. And, TATA's being TATA's would be happy to do so, provided the government facilitated their entry. Also, so would the house of TVS, who anyway started off as public bus service providers in the city of Madurai, but had to give it up because of nationalisation during emergency. The liberalisation thereafter has been token at best, leading to a situation where the organised sector would rather keep away totally, leaving it all in the hands of the 'blue-line' kind of operators, apart from the only slightly better government agencies, with disastrous consequences. The sad irony however is that whereas it is in vital infrastructure sectors such as public bus transport services that the country so desperately needs the efficiencies of the organised sector players like TATA's and TVS's, in order to contain the ever increasing damage to the environment apart from the cluttering of the cities, they have willy-nilly landed up doing exactly the opposite, by producing more and more cars and motor-bikes. The Nobel prize bestows a responsibility upon Dr Pachauri to correct this anomaly.
COMMENTS
liberalize pubtrans
tsubba - 8 December, 2007 - 17:26
interesting. How does mass transport liberalize? TATA/TVS become more than vehicle builders and become service providers or TATA/TVS do consultancy for transport authorities or take over entire trasnport authorities of the cities?
Panel On Climate Change
tsubba - 19 December, 2007 - 23:21
State
Sets Up Panel on Climate Change
Deccan Herald
Meeting for
the first time at the Vikas Soudha on Wednesday, the panel, under the
chairmanship of Prof B K Chandrashekhar, chairman, legislative council,
deliberated on its roadmap in the coming days. With the department of forest, ecology and
environment taking an active role, the committee will bring together
various departments to look at their daily activities and prepare a
baseline for the state’s contribution to climate change.
A few sub-groups will identify the areas of concern in a few days and
start collecting available information. “Once this is available, we can
start discussing strategies on what needs to be done and how,” said
Prof Chandrashekhar.
The departments of forest
and industries and water and pollution boards have come forward
to colloborate on this effort. The Environmental Management and Policy
Research Institute will coordinate and provide administrative support
and funds.
The final report of the
findings will be prepared in four months. This will have an
inventory of issues related to climate change from local to state
levels and in all the sectors concerned.
The committee comprising
legislators, secretaries from the many departments, academics and
scientists agreed that there was a need to improve understanding on the
subject.
This also meant bringing many more players into the network like
industries and entrepreneurs who have set up CDM projects. The state is
among the top few in the numbers of such projects that qualify for
carbon credits in the international market for setting up sustainable
projects.
Public Debate
The chairman is also keen to have public debates on the subject. Anyone
can write to the committee to bring things to its notice, he said. “We
need to be more transparent in our workings. This is one such attempt
to involve everyone into the act,” he told Deccan Herald. Global
warming is a serious issue that needs to be tackled immediately, he
added.
The committee would now go in for statutory backing to empower it.
Eventually, the committee will work a policy framework to supplement
and harmonise with the national policy to mitigate and adapt to climate
change.
As observed by Aravind Jannu, secretary, environment and ecology, all
this will take time as it means working across departments, identifying
the linkages between disasters and climate changes, prioritising needs,
etc.
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