By Rajiv Shah India must confront its accelerating ecological emergency with systemic reforms rather than symbolic gestures, climate and energy expert Soumya Dutta warned during an interactive workshop in Ahmedabad titled “India’s Environmental Crisis: Where Do We Go From Here Living?”. Introduced by Jesuit activist Cedric Prakash as both a scientist and people’s movement organiser, Dutta said India was already facing life-threatening consequences of environmental neglect.
By Raj Kumar Sinha* Most major cities of Madhya Pradesh—Bhopal, Jabalpur, Gwalior, Ujjain and Sagar—depend directly or indirectly on rivers, lakes and groundwater for drinking water. All these sources are under increasing pressure from urban sewage, industrial waste and solid garbage. Sewage treatment plants are either inadequately designed or, in many cases, completely non-functional. As a result, partially treated or untreated sewage flows directly into water bodies. The National Green Tribunal (NGT), based in Bhopal, recently acknowledged that serious risks of water contamination exist not only in Indore, but in other major cities of the state as well. The remark points not only to administrative failures but also raises deep questions about the model of urban water governance in Madhya Pradesh. The NGT’s comments come at a time when urban populations are expanding rapidly, yet sewage treatment, solid waste management and water protection systems have failed to grow in proporti...