India and China need to team up to deal with environmental problems

Washington, March 19 (ANI): A Michigan State University (MSU) scientist and colleagues have said that China and India need to collaborate to slow global warming, deforestation, water shortages and other environmental issues.

“China and India are the two largest countries in terms of population,” said Jianguo Liu, MSU University Distinguished Professor of fisheries and wildlife who holds the Rachel Carson Chair in Sustainability.

“Even while the rest of the world is in a recession, the economies of China and India are growing and the countries’ consumption of raw materials is increasing. Cooperation between the two is vital to mitigating negative environmental impacts,” he added.

In the report “China, India and the Environment,” published in the March 19 issue of the journal Science, Liu and co-authors advocate using scientific collaboration as a bridge to help break down political barriers between the two nations – ultimately benefiting the larger global society.

All the authors have strong research programs in one or both of the countries.

“We all have a huge interest in a sustainable world and the way we’re managing it now, it simply isn’t sustainable,” said Peter Raven, co-author and president of the Missouri Botanical Garden.

“The problems get worse every year; biodiversity loss and climate change have clear global significance. Our thesis is the two countries share so much adjacent territory that the environmental benefits should be obvious and, informed by scientific analysis, should provide a bridge between them,” he added.

According to Liu, water availability could be an increasingly challenging issue facing the two countries and one that will require careful cooperation.

Many rivers flow through both China and India. If one country builds too many dams on its side to generate hydroelectric power, it will likely cause water shortages downstream in the other country.

“Water is a huge issue. It’s being discussed extensively. We need to make people aware of the benefits of cooperation,” said Liu.

“It’s more than just China and India that will be affected if these two countries don’t work together. The environmental impacts will be felt around the world, including in the United States,” he added.

“One thing we have learned from the recession is that without sustainability there cannot be unlimited growth,” said Kamaljit Bawa, University of Massachusetts-Boston distinguished professor of biology and president of the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment in Bangalor, India.

“The two countries are not facing recession and it is time for them to exercise environmental stewardship. Future economic growth is contingent upon this stewardship,” he added. (ANI)

Social activists express concern over apathy to global warming

Dehradun, Apr 27 (ANI): Social activists and voluntary organizations here have expressed concern that political parties are not taking up the issue of global warming.

Social activists like Padmashri, Dr. Anil Joshi said that political parties have never raised the serious issue of global warming in their election manifestos.

“It is unfortunate that ten years have gone by since the state of Uttrarakhand came into existence, but till now none of the parties on a political level have worried about the issue of global warming.

They haven’t tried to show in their election manifesto that if they came to power in Uttrakhand, they will look into things like how much water is in rivers, how many forests have become greener, how much forest area has increased and how much soil has become fertile,” said Dr. Joshi, a social activist.

Depleting natural resources in the region has been attributed to lack of stringent laws and strategy to preserve natural resources like water and forests.

The state has been facing effects of global warming as the number of glaciers is decreasing.

“When we talk about natural resources like forest and land, there is an important aspect behind it. The alpine zone, which comprises area near the glaciers like Bogyalas, Joshimath, Auli, Dharasu, these places consist of alpine pastures that are rich in herbal products but today these natural resources are in danger. This is happening due to global warming,”said J.T Gragon, a scientist.

Around 65 per cent area of Uttrakhand comprises forest area and about 12 rivers flow through the state.

The U.N. Climate Panel has projected that world atmospheric temperature will rise between 1.8 and 4.0 degrees Celsius because of emissions of greenhouse gases that could bring floods, droughts, heat waves and more powerful storms.

As glaciers and ice sheets melt, they can raise overall ocean levels and swamp low-lying areas.

In Asia, by 2050, freshwater availability in Central, South, East and South-East Asia, particularly in large river basins, is projected to decrease. (ANI)