Finds the industry growing unsustainably in West Bengal and other parts of India
Says over 40 per cent of sponge iron factories in West Bengal violate environmental norms
Cancun, December 10, 2010: At about 5.00 pm Mexico time today, a text of an agreement for the Ad-Hoc Working Group on Long-term Cooperative Action (AWG-LCA) made its appearance at the Moon Palace Hotel, the venue of the 16th Conference of Parties. For India and its millions of poor, this text can only be termed as a betrayal.
Related storyl: India stuns all at Cancun by opening up to binding emission commitments
As the negotiators battle it out at Cancun to pave way for a deal in climate change, India circulated a proposal called International Consultation and Analysis (ICA), as a middle path on the controversial issue of transparency on mitigation actions. This mechanism would essentially mean third-party monitoring of domestic targets and mitigation actions, something that violates the basic premise of the global climate debate.
Critiques industry’s reported reticence in sharing its profits with project-affected people.
• New Delhi-based NGO Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) says the provision of benefit-sharing envisioned in the proposed Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 2010 is the “first step towards repairing and repaying the damages done to poor communities living on mineral-rich lands”
How emissions-intensive are our industries?
A note on CSE’s latest report, Challenge of the New Balance
2009 warmest year ever recorded for India