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Climate change may have caused Kashmir floods :CSE

Published on Sep 11, 2014

By EMN

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[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he devastating floods in Jammu and Kashmir could be a manifestation of extreme weather events induced by climate change, the Centre for Science and Environment said Wednesday. Sunita Narain, director general of CSE, said the calamities in Mumbai (2005), Leh (2010), Uttarakhand (2013) and now Jammu and Kashmir show a similar pattern of extreme rainfall, which can be a result of climate change. She said that as was the case with some of the previous extreme rainfall events, the scale of disaster in Jammu and Kashmir has been exacerbated by unplanned development, especially along the river banks. She said: “In the last 100 years, more than 50 percent of lakes, ponds and wetlands of Srinagar have been encroached upon for constructing buildings and roads. The banks of the Jhelum river have been taken over in a similar manner, vastly reducing the river’s drainage capacity.”CSE deputy general director Chandra Bhushan said Jammu and Kashmir is not prepared to handle extreme rainfall events. “Jammu and Kashmir does not have a flood forecasting system. Its disaster management system is also rudimentary,” he said. Narain said that according to the latest analysis by the Working Group II of the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) assessment report (AR5), floods and droughts are likely to increase in India. She added: “The IPCC’s 2011 special report on managing the risks of extreme events and disasters to advance climate change adaptation presents projections for the period 2071-2100. It points to increasing incidents of more frequent and intense heavy precipitation over most regions.” She exhorted the government to come out of its denial mode that climate change is not affecting us. “The government must discard its ostrich-like policy and get out of its denial mode. We will have to see the linkages between climate change and the events such as those unfolding in Jammu and Kashmir. We will have to accept that climate change is going to affect us more and more in the future. We will have to start preparing to adapt to the climate change,” she said. But is the centre listening. Even after the devastation sweeping across Jammu and Kashmir, the worst flood in 100 years the Environment ministry on Wednesday moved to review 5 acts. These acts all deal with sections that are linked with maintain ‘ecological balances’. The centre must keep the end goal of ‘sustainable development’ in the decision it takes India is to meet the challenges of the future. The toll of the floods in Jammu and Kashmir is only unfolding. A high-level committee has been constituted by the government to review various environment laws in order to bring them in line with “current requirements”, an official said Wednesday. The committee has been set up in the backdrop of the government taking serious measures to speed up the environmental clearance process for achieving economic growth without compromising green issues It will review the Environment (Protection) Act of 1986, Forest (Conservation) Act 1980, Wildlife (Protection) Act 1972, The Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act 1974 and The Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act 1981, said an official release here. The committee will assess the status of implementation of each of these acts vis-a-vis the objectives, and will examine and take into account various court orders and judicial pronouncements relating to these acts. The committee will recommend specific amendments needed so as to bring them in line with the current requirements to meet objectives. It will then draft proposed amendments in each of these acts. The committee will be headed by former cabinet secretary T.S.R. Subramanian. The other members include former environment secretary Viswanath Anand and Justice (Retd.) A.K. Srivastav. The ministry has also invited comments and suggestions in this regard on the environment ministry website.