807 results on '"*ENVIRONMENTAL policy"'
Search Results
2. Tide of change: Urgency of a national marine litter policy in India.
- Author
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Sambandam M, Mishra P, Dhineka K, Kaviarasan T, Murthy MVR, and Ravichandran M
- Subjects
- India, Environmental Monitoring, Water Pollution prevention & control, Water Pollution statistics & numerical data, Waste Products, Plastics, Environmental Policy
- Abstract
The rise of plastics in the 20th century revolutionized modern life but inadvertently exacerbated the marine litter crisis. The proliferation of wastes such as single-use plastics has escalated pollution along the coastline, demanding coordinated, decisive, and unified action. While the absence of specific national marine litter policies is concerning, there is growing recognition of urgency to address this issue. A group of experts and stakeholders was involved through a multi-staged workshop to assess the generated information based on scientific evidence and formulate a framework for the National Marine Litter Policy (NMLP). This paper proposes policy options (4 targets & 20 strategies) to address marine litter pollution, especially plastics, and aims to elucidate the urgency and significance of implementing an NMLP as a comprehensive strategy to combat plastics pollution. Implementing dedicated policies and action plans tailored to the unique challenges faced by each country is a vital step towards sustainable oceans., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. India's 50-year-old Chipko movement is a model for environmental activism.
- Author
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Prasanna NS and Ravikanth G
- Subjects
- History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, India, Conservation of Natural Resources history, Conservation of Natural Resources trends, Environmental Policy history, Environmental Policy trends, Political Activism trends
- Published
- 2024
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4. Concentration of asset owners exposed to power sector stranded assets may trigger climate policy resistance.
- Author
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von Dulong A
- Subjects
- Humans, Asia, Coal, Europe, United States, India, China, Dissent and Disputes, Policy Making, Asian People, Ownership, Environmental Policy, Coal Mining
- Abstract
Thoroughly assessing the owners and distribution of stranded assets in a 2 °C scenario is essential to anticipate climate policy resistance. We employ novel data to analyze owners and incidence of asset stranding in the power sector globally. We show that Asia-Pacific, Europe, and the US are highly exposed to stranded assets, especially coal plants. Stranded assets are highly concentrated in a few asset owners in some countries (e.g., India). Even if owners are more equally exposed (e.g., in the US) they can vary considerably in the asset stranding timing due to differences in plant fleets' age profile. European, US, and Chinese asset owners own large shares of stranded coal plants abroad. Listed owners may face stranded assets of up to 78% of their share price or more than 80% of their equity. Asset stranding exposure positively correlates with ownership of alternative energy assets. India stands out owning many stranded assets but little alternative energy., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2023
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5. Financial Incentives for Promotion of Electric Vehicles in India-An Analysis Using the Environmental Policy Framework.
- Author
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Shah, Rajiv V.
- Subjects
MONETARY incentives ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,GLOBAL warming ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact charges ,ELECTRIC vehicles - Abstract
India has seen some of the most damaging social and environmental effects of air pollution in recent times. It has also committed at the COP 21 in Paris to help reduce global warming. Following this voluntary agreement, India plans to increase the share of electric vehicles to 30% of total vehicles sold by 2030 to reduce air pollution. This paper studies the major financial incentives and policy measures undertaken since 2015 as part of the EV policy and views it through the lens of the Environmental Policy Framework, which considers five major types of instruments: Regulations and Standards, Green Taxes, Incentives, and Subsidies, Carbon Credits and Voluntary Negotiations. Another instrument called 'Information Dissemination Measures' is added to this framework to help evaluate the current EV policy. We find that while there are good financial incentives, to begin with, charging infrastructure and research in battery technology needs to be increased in India. There is also an urgent need to improve communication and awareness about EVs and their role in the reduction of pollution to help overcome the hesitancy in adopting this new technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Integration and effectiveness of formal environmental education in Africa and India: Review.
- Author
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Gebrekidan, Tsegay Kahsay and Gebremedhin, Gebremariam Gebrezgabher
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ENVIRONMENTAL education ,ASSESSMENT of education ,GRADE levels ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
Increasing environmental awareness, knowledge, attitudes, and motivation to address environmental challenges and improve the environment are the main goals of environmental education (EE). Using a goal-based, process-based education evaluation model and parameters like the integration of EE in environmental policy, the potential rich environmental content of the curriculum, and education about, in/through, and for the environment using secondary data, it was possible to evaluate the effectiveness of EE. With the exception of India, the legal evolution of EE across Africa, particularly after the Earth Submit Declaration, has been similar and attempted to be incorporated at the legislative level. In India and Tanzania, where EE is about, in/through, and for the environment practiced, it is integrated into the curriculum at all grade levels. These countries also tried to promote indigenous knowledge and practical-based education on local and global environmental aspects. Whereas in Ethiopia, in lower grades, EE is about the school and little in/through the environment and hardly for the environment, in South Africa, there is hardly any structured, harmonized, and effective practical implementation of EE. Due to fewer government concerns, generalized integration, a lack of a well-written strategy, and financial and technological constraints, EE in Africa is not applied, is ground-based and is ineffective. Therefore, it should incorporate EE in all subjects at all school levels and needs further study on the effectiveness of EE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Environmental policy instruments, environmental innovation and the reputation of enterprises.
- Author
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Liao, Zhongju
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations & the environment , *CORPORATE image , *DESERTIFICATION , *RESOURCE exploitation ,ENVIRONMENTAL aspects - Abstract
Environmental policy is an important means to promote the environmental innovation of enterprises, and environmental innovation is a concrete manifestation for enterprises to follow environmental regulations and assume social responsibility. This study constructs a relationship model of environmental policy instruments, environmental innovation, and corporate reputation along the logical line of "policy-behaviour-performance". Three hundred and six manufacturing enterprises are selected as the research sample, and the influence of three kinds of environmental policy instruments and their combination on the environmental innovation of enterprises is also tested by using a structural equation model and multiple regression analysis. The influence of environmental innovation on the reputation of enterprises is also analysed. The results show that the market-based instrument and information-based instrument have significant positive effects on the three dimensions of an enterprise's environmental innovation, while the command-and-control instrument only has a significant positive effect on eco-organization innovation; eco-organization innovation, eco-process innovation, and eco-product innovation play the role of improving corporate reputation. In addition, as to eco-organization innovation, the combination of the command-and-control instrument and the market-based instrument, as well as the combination of command-and-control, market-based, and information-based instruments, have synergistic effects; as to eco-product innovation, the combination of the command-and-control and information-based instrument has synergistic effects. According to the research conclusion, this study gives the corresponding management implications and points out future research directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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8. India's environmental policy standoff: reimagining stakeholder engagement spaces.
- Author
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TAMBE, S., FRENCH, L., WYBORN, C., SCARLETT, L., DEFRIES, R., NAGENDRA, H., KULKARNI, H., SRIVASTAVA, P., AGRAWAL, N. K., RATHORE, B. M. S., and KINHAL, G.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,STAKEHOLDER analysis ,NATURE conservation ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Copyright of International Forestry Review is the property of Commonwealth Forestry Association and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
9. REVISITING INDIA'S ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY.
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Singh, Rajesh Kumar and Mishra, Aparna
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,WILDLIFE conservation laws ,FOREST conservation - Abstract
The article revisits the environmental policy of India, including the Wild Life protection Act of 1972 and 1986, National Forest Policy of 1988, and National Environemtn Policy of 2006, and discusses the country's concerns about environmental sustainability.
- Published
- 2015
10. What humanity should eat to stay healthy and save the planet.
- Author
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Vaidyanathan G
- Subjects
- Animals, Baltimore, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Diet Surveys, Earth, Planet, Ethiopia, Famine statistics & numerical data, Farmers, Food Supply economics, Food Supply statistics & numerical data, Humans, India epidemiology, Kenya, Livestock metabolism, Lobbying, Nitrogen metabolism, Phosphorus metabolism, Policy Making, Seafood statistics & numerical data, Seafood supply & distribution, Diet, Healthy trends, Environmental Policy, Food Supply methods, Greenhouse Effect prevention & control, Health Policy, Nutritional Status, Sustainable Development trends
- Published
- 2021
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11. How to tackle complexity in urban climate resilience? Negotiating climate science, adaptation and multi-level governance in India.
- Author
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Sethi M, Sharma R, Mohapatra S, and Mittal S
- Subjects
- Cities, Humans, India, City Planning methods, Climate Change, Earth Sciences methods, Environmental Policy
- Abstract
As the world's population is expected to be over 2/3rd urban by 2050, climate action in cities is a growing area of interest in the inter-disciplines of development policy, disaster mitigation and environmental governance. The climate impacts are expected to be quite severe in the developing world, given its urban societies are densely packed, vastly exposed to natural elements while possessing limited capabilities. There is a notable ambiguity and complexity that inhibits a methodical approach in identifying urban resilience measures. The complexity is due to intersection of large number of distinct variables in climate geoscience (precipitation and temperature anomalies at different locations, RCPs, timeline), adaptation alternatives (approach, priority, intervention level) and urban governance (functional mandate, institutional capacity, and plans & policies). This research examines how disparate and complex knowledge and information in these inter-disciplines can be processed for systematic 'negotiation' to situate, ground and operationalize resilience in cities. With India as a case, we test this by simulating mid-term and long-run climate scenarios (2050 & 2080) to map regional climate impacts that shows escalation in the intensity of climate events like heat waves, urban flooding, landslides and sea level rise. We draw on suitable adaptation measures for five key urban sectors- water, infrastructure (including energy), building, urban planning, health and conclude a sleuth of climate resilience building measures for policy application through national/ state policies, local urban plans and preparation of city resilience strategy, as well as advance the research on 'negotiated resilience' in urban areas., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
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12. Does greenwashing obstruct sustainable environmental technologies and green financing from promoting environmental sustainability? Analytical evidence from the Indian economy.
- Author
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Das, Narasingha, Gangopadhyay, Partha, Alam, Mohammad Mahtab, Mahmood, Haider, Bera, Pinki, Khudoykulov, Khurshid, Dey, Labani, and Hossain, Md. Emran
- Subjects
GREEN technology ,GREENWASHING (Marketing) ,CLEAN energy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,INNOVATION adoption ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
This study aims at assessing the impacts of green growth, in the form of adopting sustainable energy technologies and financing green projects, on environmental conditions in India. Thus, this study is important from the point of view of India's efforts in formulating strategies linked with achieving the environmental development targets enlisted under United Nations SDG‐13 declaration. In this regard, it is assumed that strategies targeted at establishing green growth in India can fail in the presence of greenwashing. To test this hypothesis, a newly introduced econometric technique, namely the Augmented‐ARDL techniques of estimation is used. Accordingly, the results obtained firstly suggest the existence of long‐run and cointegrated relationship exists between the variables of choice. Secondly, it is very much striking to find out that the the there is an inverse relationship between use of sustainable environmental technologies and environmental sustainability across India. Hence, this particular finding points to the possibility of stimulating geenwashing in the context of technology adoption in order to improve the state of the environment in India. Lastly, financing of green projects is seen to promote environmental sustainability which, in turn, affirms the absence of greenwashing in the context of green financing initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Environmental Information Policy in India feed Pro‐Environment Industry Operation: A Case Study of EIA Report on Proposed Integrated Steel Complex Site, Halakundi, Karnataka.
- Author
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Lohochowdhury, Biplab, Giridhar, Divya, Kumar Pal, Arvind, and Mitra, Archan
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION policy , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *FEED industry , *INDUSTRIAL development projects - Abstract
Infrastructure development/industrialization in an area without proper environmental assessment is well known. Governments have implemented environmental impact assessment (EIA) policies to avoid harming the environment. Implementing EIA policy in coordination with local government agencies requires an understanding of environmental information flow. Before and after data sets on environmental change are critical for pro‐environment industry operation. Is it possible to synchronies EIA and Environmental information Centre (EIC) in a way that reduces environmental pollution while increasing entropy at all levels of communication? How does EIC affect EIA regimes? How to close environmental data? How should environmental data be used in EIA? A robust environment information policy (EIP) must address these issues in pro‐environmental development projects and industrial operations (EIP). However, access to information is still limited in India. Lack of quality and complete information makes it difficult for regulators to evaluate large‐scale infrastructure/industry development data submitted by proponents. Proposers and consultants should be given specific instructions on how to communicate with all stakeholders in the project impact zone. Additional information within the broad category of "Information" is sought. As a result, the researchers sought to gather data for the Environment Information System (EIS). Climate change and grassroots communication are two areas being studied. Information is critical in environmental matters. Despite public opinion, authorities ignore environmental planning. The policy decision cycle should priorities data. To better communicate about the environment, the author proposes a proper chain and system of information (Information Modeling). The reporting agencies strictly adhere to the EIA's policy. After their purpose is served, these reports are useless. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. Structural conflict under the new green dilemma: Inequalities in development of renewable energy for emerging economies.
- Author
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Xu Q, Dhaundiyal S, and Guan C
- Subjects
- China, India, Renewable Energy, Socioeconomic Factors, Conservation of Natural Resources, Environmental Policy
- Abstract
Climate Change related concerns affect multiple international and national policy forefronts. Globally, conflicts over renewables industry between the developed and emerging economies have affected the provision of green goods-thus slowing the overall welfare of global environmental governance. This article argues that the above phenomenon is a new form of green dilemma which arises from the long-lasting issue of balancing environmental protection and economic gains. It further tracks the historical evolutionary change of green dilemma, from version 1.0 to 2.0 to the current avatar of Green Dilemma 3.0. By developing the Green Dilemma Framework, the article aims to uncover the logic underlying the industrial policies and trade conflicts between the developed and emerging economies in their energy transitions. Utilizing the US vs China and US vs India conflicts in the solar PV industries as the two group of cases, the key feature of Green Dilemma 3.0 is illustrated as the conflict over status and control of the global division of labor in the new energy industry. This article offers a novel perspective on global inequality by deconstructing the unequal global production system that can act to restrict the optimization of energy use and production in tackling climate change and thus successively hindering global environmental governance in its realization of optimal results. Underneath global climate change governance, there is an unequal global production network and political system, and both these follow a core, semi-periphery, and periphery distribution of power structure. We argue that the inequality of global production system suppresses the effects of subsidy competition and erodes the economic foundation of global climate governance., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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15. Environment accounting and reporting in fossil fuel sector in India.
- Author
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Kavitha, T. N. and Sulaipher, M.
- Subjects
FOSSIL fuels ,ENVIRONMENTAL auditing ,ENVIRONMENTAL reporting ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,DIRECT action ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
Environmental accounting is important in supplying required data about the environment to many consumers at all levels for a variety of reasons. Ecosystem protection, corporate governance, and corporate environmental performance are all increasing in India. They are a result of global calls for businesses to be held accountable for their direct actions. As a result, Greek companies have begun to establish and publicize environmental policies. The goal of this study was to look into how firms in India disclosed their environmental performance. The aim of this study is to analyze the idea of environmental/green accounting, as well as its practices and reporting in India. A little effort has been undertaken to raise environmental awareness in underdeveloped nations like as India, as well as to investigate the obstacles involved with environmental accounting adoption. The researcher found that the existing condition of environmental accounting processes has not altered after doing extensive investigation. Their Environmental Policy shows that they are making every effort to increase environmental protection, however the study results do not indicate the ecological cost, duty, or expenditure [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. Public protests and environmental policy‐making: The cases of Xiamen antiparaxylene protests in China and the civic movement against Kodaikkanal mercury poisoning in India.
- Author
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Joseph, Justin and Thomas Karackattu, Joe
- Subjects
MERCURY poisoning ,ENVIRONMENTAL activism ,ENVIRONMENTAL advocacy organizations ,POLICY sciences ,PROTEST movements - Abstract
Copyright of Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Shifting from binaries to pluralism: Unpacking polarizing discourses on the Forest Rights Act in India.
- Author
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Bisht, Vanya, Berbés-Blázquez, Marta, Chhetri, Nalini, and Fisher, Erik
- Subjects
FOREST policy ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,DISCOURSE analysis ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,POLICY discourse ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Environmental policy debates often get polarized along binaries of environment versus economic development or conservation versus rights. Sustainability scientists and practitioners generally suggest finding common grounds as a pathway for building consensus among the diverse perspectives involved in polarized environmental policy discussions. This paper takes a critical stance towards such calls for common grounds by calling attention to the implicit assumptions that underlie these discourses. We study the case of the Forest Rights Act (FRA) in India, which has polarized the forest policy discourse between conservationists and rights activists in India. We examine scientific publications on the FRA using discourse and framing analysis and show that scholarly discourses on FRA lie along a spectrum characterized by underlying epistemic and normative practices. We identify five groups of scholars based on the unique positions they have taken on FRA: a) advocacy-centric, b) welfare-centric, c) community-centric, d) dialogue-centric, and e) techno-centric scholars. We find that negative framings of the forest dweller community lead to scientific endorsement of policy prescriptions that empower socio-political institutions that are external to these communities. We argue that scholarly calls for common grounds often assume uniform or neutral framings for the stakeholders involved. We conclude that recognizing the polarization spectrum in environmental policy discourses can help us move towards pluralistic approaches to environmental governance. • Scientific polarization on Indian forest policy discourses lies along a spectrum. • Epistemic and normative practices shape scientific positions on forest policies. • Negative framings of traditional communities tend to empower external institutions. • Calls for dialogue often do not specify framings for the stakeholders involved. • Recognize the polarization spectrum for enabling pluralistic environmental governance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Assessment of the effectiveness of policy interventions for Air Quality Control Regions in Delhi city.
- Author
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Goyal P, Gulia S, Goyal SK, and Kumar R
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants analysis, Cities, Environmental Monitoring, India, Models, Theoretical, Particulate Matter analysis, Quality Control, Seasons, Air Pollution analysis, Air Pollution prevention & control, Environmental Policy
- Abstract
Government has implemented various scattered and un-quantified control actions in Delhi city to reduce the air pollution levels; however, it still exceeds the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). The present study has been designed to assess the air quality status, identify Air Quality Control Region (AQCR), and evaluate control strategies in the city. Out of eight selected locations, ambient PM
10 , PM2.5 , and NO2 concentrations were found exceeding the daily as well as annual standards at selected AQCR with peak levels during post-monsoon than winter and summer. Anand Vihar was found to be most polluted and thus, selected as an AQCR. AERMOD performed satisfactorily in predicting pollutant concentration during winter and summer having an index of agreement in the range 0.54-0.80. PM10 and PM2.5 can be reduced substantially by increasing frequency of efficient mechanized cleaning of roads and sprinkling of water on the roads. Progressive decrease in NO2 concentrations can be achieved by restricting entry of truck in the study area through alternate path. The cumulative impact of all selected control strategies indicates a substantial decrease in air pollution within AQCR. The study also suggests a policy framework to manage the urban air quality through local scale air quality guidelines.- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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19. Values, gender and attitudes towards environmental policy: A study of future managers.
- Author
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Bhattacharyya, Asit and Rahman, Mohammed Lutfur
- Subjects
ATTITUDES toward the environment ,EXECUTIVES' attitudes ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL sciences ,ENVIRONMENTAL responsibility - Abstract
This study explores if the value priorities and their impact on future managers' attitudes towards environmental responsibilities vary with gender. While relevant prior studies mostly focus on gender‐based variations of individuals' personal values in developed economies, we concentrate on both personal values and pro‐environmental attitudes in an emerging economy. This study is built on MBA students (a proxy for future managers) in India since India is characterized as a male‐dominated society and a producer of larger number of MBA graduates. Overall, our results show that personal values and attitude towards environmental responsibilities do not vary significantly with gender. Only two values (among the 21 values) and one value type (out of 10 values) get significantly higher ranking from females compared with males. Further, although 'universalism' and 'benevolence' are found to have a statistically significant impact on respondents' attitude towards environmental responsibility, the latter is invariant to the respondents' gender. Our findings may indicate India's transformation from a male‐dominated society towards a more gender‐balanced society. These findings can be used to operationalize a pro‐environmental recruitment policy and to formulate strategies to improve female participation in MBA cohorts of business schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Integrating sustainable development goals into environment impact assessment in India: A conceptual analysis.
- Author
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Vannadil, Preetha Kizhakkekara and Prasanna, Chitra Karunakaran
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,GREY literature ,GOVERNMENT policy on climate change ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,CRITICAL analysis ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
The paper presents a systematic exploration of the linkages between environment impact assessment (EIA) and sustainable development goals (SDGs) in the Indian context through a critical analysis of the socio‐ecological impacts of development projects and the policy climate for environmental clearances. A conceptual framework portraying the interlinkages of the systemic disruptions in the socio‐ecological realms, policy challenges, and SDGs is developed, which argues for integrating the SDGs into the EIA framework in India. The paper argues that the legal fluidity and dilution in the design and enactment of EIA retrogrades the crucial socio‐political transformation required for achieving sustainability. The systematic literature review of empirical, conceptual, and grey literature, undertaken on Indian EIA, highlights its instrumental role as a political tool for achieving developmental sustainability. The paper concludes by highlighting the urgent need to mainstream ecological decision‐making into all governance processes for achieving the SDGs in a transforming society like India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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21. Interaction among geopolitical risk, trade openness, economic growth, carbon emissions and Its implication on climate change in india.
- Author
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Adebayo, Tomiwa Sunday, Akadiri, Seyi Saint, Riti, Joshua Sunday, and Tony Odu, Ada
- Subjects
CARBON emissions ,DECISION making in environmental policy ,ECONOMIC expansion ,CLIMATE change ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
In this paper, we examine whether geopolitical risk influences environmental degradation, while controlling for non-renewable energy consumption, economic growth and trade openness, using a quarterly dataset from 1985Q1 to 2019Q4. The choice of India as a case study is based on a number of reasons. India is a developing country, which produces approximately 3.2% of global GDP. Also, India produces almost 17.7% of the world population. The country also emits about 6.8% of global carbon emissions, and according to the 2020 report of the consulting firm Eurasia, India is ranked fifth in terms of geopolitical risk. This study adds to the existing literature by using the quantile-on-quantile (QQR) regression to examine the effect of geopolitical risk on environmental degradation, as well as highlighting the implications of geopolitical risk on environmental sustainability. Based on empirical estimation, we find that geopolitical risk increases and decreases carbon emissions in India. That is, geopolitical risk increases environmental degradation at middle quantiles and decreases environmental degradation at lower and higher quantiles. In addition, we find that non-renewable energy consumption, economic growth and trade openness impede environmental quality in India. Thus, we are of the opinion that policymakers, when making policy decisions on environmental quality, should factor in geopolitical risk in two areas, mitigation and channel of escalation, among other policy suggestions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Do exemptions undermine environmental policy support? An experimental stress test on the odd‐even road space rationing policy in India.
- Author
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Bernauer, Thomas, Prakash, Aseem, and Beiser‐McGrath, Liam F.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,PUBLIC support ,SPACE ,URBAN pollution ,ARTHRITIS ,FOREST landowners - Abstract
Policies sometimes exempt particular categories of regulatees for reasons of equity and political feasibility. Will the non‐exempt oppose the policy because they shoulder all of the policy costs? We outline an analytic framework for "stress testing" public support among the non‐exempt when they are provided negative information about exemptions and reduced policy effectiveness. Empirically, we study public support for the odd‐even road space rationing policy in India. Using a survey experiment with 2,182 car owners in Bangalore, we find considerable baseline support for this policy. While support among the non‐exempt erodes when they are told about exemptions, there is no additional erosion when they are told that exemptions reduce policy effectiveness. This suggests that the perception of fairness, not policy efficacy, drives the erosion of support among the non‐exempt. Yet the policy survives the stress test because the majority of respondents continue to support it, in spite of support erosion among the non‐exempt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. How Earth-observation scientists are weathering budget cuts and political scepticism.
- Author
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Kent KJ
- Subjects
- Air Pollution analysis, Atmosphere chemistry, Budgets trends, Chlorofluorocarbons analysis, Earth, Planet, Environmental Policy economics, Environmental Policy trends, Geographic Mapping, Humans, India, Internationality, Mobile Applications, Rain, Research economics, Research legislation & jurisprudence, Satellite Imagery economics, Satellite Imagery instrumentation, Spacecraft economics, Spacecraft instrumentation, United States, United States Environmental Protection Agency economics, United States Environmental Protection Agency legislation & jurisprudence, Water Supply, Budgets legislation & jurisprudence, Climate Change, Environmental Monitoring economics, Environmental Monitoring instrumentation, Environmental Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Politics, Research trends, Research Personnel economics, Uncertainty
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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24. The World Bank must clean up its act.
- Author
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Ramachandran V
- Subjects
- Environmental Policy economics, India, Power Plants economics, United States, Environmental Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Farmers, Fisheries economics, Power Plants legislation & jurisprudence, Supreme Court Decisions, Vulnerable Populations legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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25. Analyzing the causal nexus between CO2 emissions and its determinants in India: evidences from ARDL and EKC approach.
- Author
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Itoo, Haider Hassan and Ali, Nazim
- Subjects
CARBON emissions ,NATURAL resources ,RESOURCE exploitation ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CARBON cycle ,INDUSTRIAL pollution ,ENERGY consumption - Abstract
Purpose: The present study is a novel attempt to measure the impact of population growth, natural resource depletion, non-renewable energy consumption, growth of national income, remittances inflow and industrial output on carbon dioxide emissions in India during the period of 1980–2018. Design/methodology/approach: Autoregressive distributive lag (ARDL) is used to achieve the objective. The application of FMOLS (fully modified ordinary least squares), DOLS (dynamic ordinary least squares) and CCR (canonical cointegrating regression) techniques illustrate statistical robustness. Findings: The long-run ARDL results confirm that increase in population, national income and energy consumption have a positive and significant impact on pollution levels in India. In contradiction to this, long run results further reveal that the increase in natural resource depletion, industrial output and remittances inflow have insignificant and negative impact on pollution levels in India. Further, the empirical findings did not find any evidence for the applicability of the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) in India during the study period. Research limitations/implications: The study is confined to only a few important determinants of CO
2 emissions in India. However, there is a large chunk of studies that have incorporated other determinants of CO2 emissions. Specifying a few determinants of CO2 emissions in India is itself a lacuna in the present study. Moreover, taking the time period from 1980 to 2018 is also one of the limitations of the study. Practical implications: Plenty of research has been devoted to the causal relationship between the environment and its various determinants. However, not much attention has been paid to investigating the association between population growth, natural resource depletion, energy consumption, GDP per capita, remittances inflow, industry and carbon dioxide emissions in India. Since, CO2 emissions are one of the widely accepted and applied emissions in EKC applications, which the present study intends to test. Moreover, the study employs advanced econometric techniques including ARDL framework, FMOLS, DOLS and CRR methodologies to achieve robust results. Such an investigation will potentially allow policymakers to frame efficient environmental and fiscal policies to achieve the desired results. Originality/value: The continuous increase of CO2 emissions in India has compelled policy makers to prioritize this issue as soon as possible and formulate national environmental policy for reducing the share of carbon dioxides emissions in climate change. The study could constitute the focus of future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Impact of Air Pollution on Mental Health in India.
- Author
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Balakrishnan, Uttara and Tsaneva, Magda
- Subjects
AIR pollution ,MENTAL health ,EXPOSURE therapy ,AIR quality ,DEVELOPING countries ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
There is extensive evidence linking air pollution exposure to physical health. Less is known about the mental health impacts of poor air quality, especially in developing countries. We use data from India and estimate the causal impact of air pollution exposure on feeling sad, experiencing cognitive difficulties, and feeling unable to control and cope with important things in life. We instrument for air pollution exposure using the annual number of nighttime thermal inversions and show that air pollution exposure in the previous calendar year significantly worsens mental health in the current year. We examine potential mechanisms and find that air pollution exposure negatively impacts self-reported physical health, worsens respiratory conditions, and increases the likelihood of experiencing sleeping difficulties. Accounting for mental health impacts of pollution exposure is critical to accurately estimating the true health costs of air pollution and designing optimal environmental policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The moderating role of CEO power on the relationship between environmental, social and governance disclosure and financial performance in emerging market.
- Author
-
Al-Ahdal WM, Farhan NHS, Vishwakarma R, and Hashim HA
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual, Environmental Policy, India, Leadership, Commerce economics, Disclosure, Public Policy economics, Public Policy legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
The study proposes to examine how environmental, social and governance disclosure (ESG) affect the financial performance (FP) of Indian firms. Furthermore, it aims to evaluate the moderation impact of CEO power (CEOP) on the association between ESG on the FP. The study's target population is all firms indexed in NIFTY 100, representing the top one hundred firms by market capitalisation from 2017 to 2021. Data relating to ESG were collected and built based on the available data on Refinitiv Eikon Database. Results reveal that EDI positively and significantly impacts the ROE and TQ of Indian firms. Furthermore, SDI and GDI negatively and significantly affect the ROE and TQ of Indian firms. Moreover, ESG and CEOP have a significant impact on ROE. Nevertheless, ESG has a negative but highly significant impact on ROE, whilst it has a negative and low considerable impact on the TQ of Indian firms. Nonetheless, CEOP does not moderate the association between ESG and FP measured by ROE and TQ. This research contributes to the existing literature by introducing a moderator variable that has not been used in the Indian context; CEO power, which provides stakeholders and regulators with useful findings that would encourage firms to create an ESG committee to enhance ESG disclosure to compete on the world market and reach the United Nations (UN) Sustainable goal 2030. Furthermore, this paper provides insightful recommendations for creating an ESG legal framework for decision-makers., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Revisiting the relationship between remittances and CO2 emissions by applying a novel dynamic simulated ARDL: empirical evidence from G-20 economies.
- Author
-
Khan, Farman Ullah, Rafique, Amir, Ullah, Ehsan, and Khan, Faridoon
- Subjects
REMITTANCES ,ENVIRONMENTAL reporting ,GROUP of Twenty countries ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,FISCAL policy - Abstract
The current study looks at the causes of carbon dioxide (CO
2 ) emissions by considering the implications of remittances in the presence of economic growth, financial development, and energy consumption in the case of selected four G-20 economies over the period 1990–2019. This study first uses the dynamic simulated ARDL model to stimulate, estimate, and plot to predict graphs of negative and positive changes occurring in the variables along with their short-run and long-run relationships. Results of the ARDL bounds test confirm a long-term relationship among remittances, financial development, economic growth energy consumption, and CO2 emissions. Furthermore, the error correction model (ECM) also confirms the long-run relationship among CO2 emissions, remittances, financial development, economic growth, and energy use. The results of a novel dynamic simulated ARDL disclosed that financial development is completely connected to CO2 emissions in Mexico and India in the long run. On the other hand, results confirm that there is a positive relationship between remittances and CO2 emissions in the case of Australia, Germany, and India, but this relationship is insignificant with CO2 emissions in the case of Mexico. The result further disclosed that renewable energy exerts a significant impact on CO2 in Australia, Mexico, India, and Germany in the long run while remittances wield a significant impact on CO2 emissions in Australia, Mexico, and India. Moreover, the findings concluded that GDP has significant nexus with CO2 in the long run in the case of Australia, Mexico, and Germany. This study uses up new visions for the economies of G-20 countries to sustain financial and economic growth by protecting the environment from pollution through its efficient national environmental policy, fiscal policy, and monetary policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Global and Regional Drivers of Power Plant CO2 Emissions Over the Last Three Decades Revealed From Unit‐Based Database.
- Author
-
Qin, Xinying, Tong, Dan, Liu, Fei, Wu, Ruili, Zheng, Bo, Zheng, Yixuan, Liu, Jun, Xu, Ruochong, Chen, Cuihong, Yan, Liu, and Zhang, Qiang
- Subjects
FOSSIL fuels ,POWER plants ,CARBON emissions ,COAL-fired power plants ,GREAT powers (International relations) ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
The past three decades have witnessed the dramatic expansion of global biomass‐ and fossil fuel‐fired power plants, but the tremendously diverse power infrastructure shapes different spatial and temporal CO2 emission characteristics. Here, by combining Global Power plant Emissions Database (GPED v1.1) constructed in this study and the previously developed China coal‐fired power Plant Emissions Database (CPED), we analyzed multi‐scale changes and underlying drivers from the globe to the unit in generating capacities, age structure, and CO2 emissions over the past 30 yr. Our estimates show global CO2 emissions from the power sector increased from 7.5 Gt in 1990 to 13.9 Gt in 2019, and the growth of power demand meeting by large and young units mainly drives this increase for all stages. However, regional drivers were broadly different from those affecting global trends. For example, the critical roles of thermal efficiency improvement (accounting for 20% of the decrease in CO2 emissions) by eliminating small and low‐efficient coal‐fired units and fossil fuel mix (61%) by developing natural‐gas‐ and oil‐fired units were identified in preventing CO2 emission increases in the developed regions. By contrast, the decrease of fossil fuel share by speeding up the expansion of renewable power gradually demonstrates its importance in curbing emissions in the most of regions, especially including the developing economies (i.e., China and India) after 2010. Our multi‐scale results of 30 yr emission variations indicate the structure optimization and transformations of power plants is paramount importance to further curb or reduce CO2 emissions from the power sector. Plain Language Summary: The power sector is the top CO2 emitter and accounts for 37% of global anthropogenic emissions, which has great significance for climate change. Our combined database shows that the capacity of global fossil‐fuel‐ and biomass‐fired power plants experienced a substantial increase, mainly driven by the growing demand of power generation during the past three decades. In contrast to 133.3% increase of power capacity, global CO2 emissions of power plants increased by 85.3% during the period 1990–2019, and the disproportionately low increase of emissions benefited from the upgrade of coal‐fired power units and the large‐scale expansion of non‐coal‐fired ones with low/zero carbon intensity. Specifically, global power plant fleet turnover improved the power generation efficiency and optimized the fuel mix by constructing large and technologically advanced power units, slowing the growth rate of global CO2 emissions in 1990–2019. Moreover, changes in the critical role of fossil fuel power were associated with regional economic growth, environmental policy and technological advances, indicating that the expansion of non‐fossil‐fuels will likely represent an increasing factor in driving future CO2 emission reductions from the power sector. Key Points: Global CO2 emissions from the power sector increased from 7.5 Gt in 1990 to 13.9 Gt in 2019, mainly driven by the growth of demandThe efficiency improvements and the non‐coal power development carry positive effects on decreasing CO2 emissions in the developed regionsThe power shift from fossil fuels to non‐fossil fuels plays an increasingly critical role on curbing CO2 emissions in developing regions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Modelling the role of fiscal and monetary policy instruments on carbon emission in non‐linear framework: A case of emerging economy.
- Author
-
Sharma, Vishal, Fatima, Sana, Alam, Qamar, and Bharadwaj, Yogendra Pal
- Subjects
MONETARY policy ,FISCAL policy ,CARBON & the environment ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
India is the second most populous country in the world and stood at seventh rank in a major climate risk index in 2019, which is a grave concern for the Indian government, policymakers and environmentalists. Therefore, the present study examines the role of fiscal policy and monetary policy instruments along with select macroeconomic variables on carbon emission in India over the period 1971–2019 in the non‐linear framework. The outcome of the study reveals that the impact of fiscal and monetary policy instruments on carbon emission is asymmetric in nature. In addition, the positive and negative shocks in fiscal and monetary policy instruments have a positive and negative impact on carbon emissions, respectively. Based on the coefficients' magnitude, the role of fiscal policy instruments has a more prominent effect on carbon emissions than monetary policy instruments. The findings of the study imply that the Indian government is required to implement green fiscal and monetary policies. Use fiscal policy to implement a 'green tax ratio' and a 'green subsidy programme' for manufacturers and investors to reduce CO2 emissions. A 'green lending programme' should be introduced for commercial banks by implementing monetary policy via the central bank. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A comparative analysis of the environmental and social policies of the AIIB and World Bank.
- Author
-
Apolinário Júnior, Laerte and Jukemura, Felipe
- Subjects
DEVELOPMENT banks ,SOCIAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,INVESTMENT banking ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
This paper presents a comparative analysis of the environmental and social policies of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and the World Bank. Our objective is to assess how the AIIB innovates in the international financial order in terms of Environmental and Social Assessment (ESA) instruments. We analyse projects financed by the two institutions in India between 2017 and 2020, considering both institutions' social and environmental standards. First, we compare the social and environmental guidelines of both financial institutions extensively. Then, we analyse 20 projects carried out in India during this period, considering the amounts invested, risk classification policies, and the adopted ESA instruments. Finally, we conduct two case studies analysing each organization's ESA instruments based on 10 parameters of comparison. We conclude that the AIIB portrays itself as a 'middle way' bank, with the internalization of some standards of the already established multilateral development banks (MDBs), but with several innovative characteristics. We identify the incorporation of some World Bank guidelines used in ESA instruments in AIIB projects. Nevertheless, the AIIB innovates through its focus on infrastructure, the variability of its project sizes, more integration with the borrower's national policies and programmes, and the simplification of socio‐environmental analysis instruments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Reigniting a debate on coal: Case study on the Indian Government's crackdown on Greenpeace
- Author
-
Talukdar
- Published
- 2018
33. India: Formalize recycling of electronic waste.
- Author
-
Kannan D, Govindan K, and Shankar M
- Subjects
- Conservation of Natural Resources economics, Conservation of Natural Resources legislation & jurisprudence, Environmental Policy economics, India, Recycling economics, Electronic Waste statistics & numerical data, Environmental Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Recycling legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. What's Past Should be Prologue: India's Forest Commons and the Rights of Traditional Communities.
- Author
-
Dhar, Preeta and Iyengar, Shalini
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL justice , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *FORESTRY laws , *WILDLIFE conservation , *COAL mining - Abstract
The article examines the gaps and tensions in the application of environmental justice principles in the context of forest laws in India. Topics discussed include evolution of forest laws in India, explanation on rights of forest communities and wildlife conservation, and information on the coal mining of the Parsa East Ketan Besan (PEKB) mine by the Adani enterprises.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The legal framework to manage chemical pollution in India and the lesson from the Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs).
- Author
-
Sharma BM, Bharat GK, Tayal S, Nizzetto L, and Larssen T
- Subjects
- Environmental Pollutants analysis, Environmental Pollution statistics & numerical data, India, Risk Assessment, Environmental Monitoring legislation & jurisprudence, Environmental Policy, Environmental Pollution legislation & jurisprudence, Organic Chemicals analysis
- Abstract
India's rapid agro-economic growth has resulted into many environmental issues, especially related to chemical pollution. Environmental management and control of toxic chemicals have gained significant attention from policy makers, researchers, and enterprises in India. The present study reviews the policy and legal and non-regulatory schemes set in place in this country during the last decades to manage chemical risk and compares them with those in developed nations. India has a large and fragmented body of regulation to control and manage chemical pollution which appears to be ineffective in protecting environment and human health. The example of POPs contamination in India is proposed to support such a theory. Overlapping of jurisdictions and retrospectively approached environmental policy and risk management currently adopted in India are out of date and excluding Indian economy from the process of building and participating into new, environmentally-sustainable market spaces for chemical products. To address these issues, the introduction of a new integrated and scientifically-informed regulation and management scheme is recommended. Such scheme should acknowledge the principle of risk management rather than the current one based on risk acceptance. To this end, India should take advantage of the experience of recently introduced chemical management regulation in some developed nations., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Governing Energy and Environment for India's National Security.
- Author
-
Gupta, Purnima M.
- Subjects
NATIONAL security ,BIOMASS energy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Published
- 2024
37. Innovative Geographic Visualization for Improved Understanding and Effective Public Participation in Environmental Policy Making and Implementation.
- Author
-
Arun Kumar, A., Upgupta, Sujata, Gaur, Tanvi, Sathyakumar, S., and Ramesh, K.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,DECISION making in environmental policy ,SCIENTIFIC visualization - Abstract
Public participation can not only contribute to improvement of decisions, but can also help in enhancing the capability of communities to solve problems and pursue common concerns. Arguably, a strong public participation in environmental governance could increase the commitment among stakeholders, which strengthens the compliance and enforcement of policies. Nevertheless, despite the critical importance of public participation in policy making, such involvements are not as effective as may be desired for logical conclusion and efficient implementation of policies. The near nonexistence of visualization tools at the disposal of the general public to aid in visual understanding of the problem is the major cause factor for the non-involvement and negligible influence of the populace in policy making. One such facility is being established at Wildlife Institute of India for visualizing the impacts of climate change on biodiversity of Indian Himalayan Region (IHR). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A review on distribution and importance of wetlands in the perspective of India.
- Author
-
Arya, Ashish Kumar, Joshi, Kamal Kant, Bachheti, Archana, and Deepti
- Subjects
WETLANDS ,WETLAND conservation ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SPECIES diversity ,GOVERNMENT policy ,AQUATIC biodiversity - Abstract
Biodiversity is not equally distributed across the world. It depends on the type of various habitats and food availability. In these habitats, wetlands play an import role to increase the biodiversity of the particular area. Many studies have focused on various habitats to conserve biodiversity. However, the wetland studies are very few due to the lack of information on their distribution and importance. The present review focusses on the wetland status and their importance in India. India has vibrant and diverse wetland ecosystems that support immense biodiversity. The wetlands are unique habitats which provide ecological, social and economic values. However, rapid urbanization, industrialization and uncontrolled agricultural practices have pressurized to shrink the wetlands in India. The present paper highlights the wetland habitats in India with their geographical location, distribution, avian species diversity and their significance. The paper also discusses the growing threats like climate change, land-use change and agriculture/municipal waste to the wetlands and the conservation efforts by Indian government policies, i.e. National Wetland Conservation Programme, National Environmental Policy, and National Plan for conservation of the aquatic ecosystem. In addition, on the basis of previous studies on wetlands, it is suggested that the role of stakeholders is very much responsible for wetland conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Comparing Climate Policy Processes in India, Brazil, and South Africa: Domestic Engagements With International Climate Policy Frameworks.
- Author
-
Upadhyaya, Prabhat, Fridahl, Mathias, Linnér, Björn-Ola, and Román, Mikael
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change mitigation , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy & politics , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Using policy cycle model as a heuristic, this article studies Indian, Brazilian, and South African engagement with Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) by (a) comparing NAMA policy process and (b) identifying factors driving or limiting the framework’s domestic application. India largely remained uninterested in NAMAs, Brazil aligned its domestic climate policy and NAMAs, while South Africa had a more nuanced engagement when formulating NAMAs. Four factors influenced these countries’ NAMA engagements: the level and necessity of international support, the availability of domestic policy provisions to tackle climate change, the domestic institutional capacity to coordinate interministerial functioning, and the role of individuals in the institutional apparatus. As an international climate policy framework, studying NAMA engagement provides learnings for nationally determined contributions under the Paris Agreement for designing the instrument, ensuring clarity on support provisions for ratcheting up ambitions, and enhancing institutional capacity, to expedite transition from policy formulation to implementation and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Using Natural Experiments and Counterfactuals for Causal Assessment: River Salinity and the Ganges Water Agreement.
- Author
-
Penny, Gopal, Mondal, M. Shahjahan, Biswas, Subir, Bolster, Diogo, Tank, Jennifer L., and Müller, Marc F.
- Subjects
STREAM salinity ,WATER supply ,WATER ,STREAMFLOW ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
The effect of environmental policy on water resources is often challenging to evaluate due to dynamic interactions between people and water, particularly in data‐scarce watersheds. Increasing interactions between society and hydrology present a need to understand causal relations for improved assessment and prediction in complex human‐water systems. Conventional approaches to causal assessment in hydrology are sometimes insufficient due to data scarcity or system complexity. We argue that natural experiments present a promising and complementary avenue for assessing causal relations in such systems. In this spirit, we describe a natural experiment to assess causal effects of the Ganges water treaty, between India and Bangladesh, on streamflow and channel salinity in the Ganges delta in Bangladesh. We apply causal inference to assess the effect of the treaty on streamflow and use the results to generate synthetic ensembles of streamflow and salinity under a realistic scenario (with the treaty) and a counterfactual scenario (without the treaty). We then use synthetic streamflow ensembles to model salinity ensembles. The Ganges water treaty increased dry‐season streamflow in Bangladesh by approximately 18% and decreased channel salinity by approximately 10%. The treaty has the greatest effect on salinity in Bangladesh in the driest years, but the overall effect is small compared with natural variability. We show that our approach accounts for natural hydrologic variability to accurately assess the causal effect of the treaty, compared with a naive approach that greatly overestimates the effect. This research demonstrates the value of natural experiments for causal assessment in coupled human‐water systems. Key Points: Natural experiments and counterfactuals are promising tools for causal assessmentWe use a natural experiment and generate counterfactuals to assess the effect of the Ganges water treaty on streamflow and salinityThe Ganges water treaty plays a modest yet important role in reducing salinity in the delta in Bangladesh [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Referent object, securitising actors and the audience: the climate change threat and the securitisation of development in India.
- Author
-
Sahu, Anjan Kumar
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,ECONOMIC development ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Climate change issue has evolved as a central policy of the Government of India. The crux of the policy is centered on the economic development. Internationally, India has been consistently resisting the developed country's climate policy as the policy might threaten New Delhi's economic development prospect. However, the recent evidence of climate change threat to the economic development compelled political leaders to design the domestic climate policy—the National Action Plan on Climate Change—which is consistent with the country's economic development. Considering the global climate diplomacy, this paper examines the evolution of India's domestic climate change-development discourse and how climate change has been constructed as a major threat at the highest political level that securitises the country's economic development. The threat discourse is explained from the standpoint of the securitisation theory to explore three core constituents of India's domestic climate policy: the referent object, securitising actors and the audience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Environmental Protection Policies in Asian Countries: With Special Reference to India.
- Author
-
Bala, Rajni and Suneep
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,PARIS Agreement (2016) ,MONETARY incentives ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,INDUSTRIAL workers - Abstract
Ecological problems are increasing globally, studies are being done seriously for environmental protection; Efforts are being made to improve the deteriorating relationship between development and the environment. Since the publication of the issue,=Development and the Environment' by the World Bank in 1992, several articles on the relationship between development and the environment have been published in the economic literature, most of which suggestthe government policies to improve this deteriorating relationship. In the direction of environmental protection, there have been many policy changes in various developed and developing countries, which have yielded promising results. Some countries have adopted the policy of financial incentives; some countries have given colour codes based on the pollution of factories. Some countries have adopted a policy of campaigning against pollutants and some have started following a policy of punitive recovery based on polluted emissions. Many countries have begun making industrial workers and the public aware of pollution because they are the worst affected by pollution. These efforts have yielded good results. In Asian countries, many positive trends can be found in environmental protection through governance. On the other hand, environmental policies & laws were strengthened, particularly in the 1970s and again in the 1990s. India follows the basic principle of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). According to which, countries responsible for climate change have to contribute more to emission reductionsthan other less accountable countries. Thus, India is not bound by these responsibilities but can make voluntary contributions. At the world level, ever since the environment has become an important issue in international politics, India has been working on it responsibly. India is trying to fulfil the commitments made at the world level. India signed the Paris Agreement on April 22, 2016 with the objective of reducing greenhouse gases under UNFCCC. India is actively working with China and G-77 for joint programme development on the agreement. UNFCCC has given a number of presentations on finance, technology, forestry and other sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
43. The Paris Agreement on Climate Change and India.
- Author
-
Lakshmanan, Pushpa Kumar, Singh, Shachi, and Lakshmi, S. Asta
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *GOVERNMENT policy on climate change , *CLIMATE change mitigation , *EMISSIONS (Air pollution) , *GOVERNMENT policy , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation on climate change , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,UNITED Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (1992) - Abstract
The article discusses the Paris Agreement, an international agreement within the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and mentions India's commitment towards achieving the goals set by the agreement. Topics discussed include a brief description of the Paris Agreement, the India's intended nationally determined contributions to reduce emissions, and recommendations for effective implementations of environmental policies for climate change mitigation among developing countries.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. India faces a long and winding path to green climate solutions.
- Author
-
Seidler, Reinmar and Bawa, Kamaljit S.
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *CLIMATE change mitigation , *WELL-being - Abstract
In this article, the author discusses protection of the environment and enhancing human well-being and challenges India is facing to address the concern. Topics discussed include impact of industrialization on India's natural forests, rates of energy production and consumption demand, and government's climate mitigation plans.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Global climate policy and local energy politics: is India hiding behind the poor?
- Author
-
Jaeger, Mark Daniel and Michaelowa, Katharina
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *CLEAN energy , *ENERGY subsidies , *MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Along with the large middle-income countries Brazil, China, and South Africa, India has been put under increasing pressure to shoulder parts of the mitigation burden and commit to national emission reduction targets. India, however, refers to its limited capacity and widespread poverty. Is India hiding behind its poor? While others examine the distribution of emissions within the country to answer this question, we study domestic policy making for energy subsidies and access to clean energy. Empirical evidence suggests that domestic policy making is at least partially consistent with the pro-poor arguments advanced at the international level. Given their large number and the country's democratic system, the poor do have some weight in Indian politics. However, pro-poor policies end where they do not translate into greater vote shares. Moreover, India's international position ignores the existing complementarities between climate-friendly and pro-poor activities. Policy relevance Despite India's recent growth spurt, its concern to fight energy poverty at home before engaging in any commitments on climate policy at the international level should be taken seriously within the international negotiations. Policy making in India is driven by democratic incentives, which, in this case, work to the benefit of the poor. Pro-poor policies may not go as far as one would wish from a developmental perspective, but the impact of the masses of the poor on domestic policy making is politically significant and cannot be ignored. This also provides some broader lessons for mitigation and adaptation policies in developing countries: politicians respond to incentives and support will only reach the needy if the appropriate incentives are in place. While we observe some significant commitment and implementation problems even in a democratic country like India, such problems must be expected to be even more serious elsewhere. This should not be overlooked when designing institutions for the allocation of climate finance, such as the Green Climate Fund. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Potential for large-scale CO 2 removal via enhanced rock weathering with croplands.
- Author
-
Beerling DJ, Kantzas EP, Lomas MR, Wade P, Eufrasio RM, Renforth P, Sarkar B, Andrews MG, James RH, Pearce CR, Mercure JF, Pollitt H, Holden PB, Edwards NR, Khanna M, Koh L, Quegan S, Pidgeon NF, Janssens IA, Hansen J, and Banwart SA
- Subjects
- Atmosphere chemistry, Brazil, China, Environmental Policy economics, Environmental Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Global Warming economics, India, Iron isolation & purification, Mining, Politics, Probability, Silicates isolation & purification, Steel isolation & purification, Temperature, Time Factors, United States, Agriculture, Carbon Dioxide isolation & purification, Crops, Agricultural, Geologic Sediments chemistry, Global Warming prevention & control, Goals, Silicates chemistry
- Abstract
Enhanced silicate rock weathering (ERW), deployable with croplands, has potential use for atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO
2 ) removal (CDR), which is now necessary to mitigate anthropogenic climate change1 . ERW also has possible co-benefits for improved food and soil security, and reduced ocean acidification2-4 . Here we use an integrated performance modelling approach to make an initial techno-economic assessment for 2050, quantifying how CDR potential and costs vary among nations in relation to business-as-usual energy policies and policies consistent with limiting future warming to 2 degrees Celsius5 . China, India, the USA and Brazil have great potential to help achieve average global CDR goals of 0.5 to 2 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) per year with extraction costs of approximately US$80-180 per tonne of CO2 . These goals and costs are robust, regardless of future energy policies. Deployment within existing croplands offers opportunities to align agriculture and climate policy. However, success will depend upon overcoming political and social inertia to develop regulatory and incentive frameworks. We discuss the challenges and opportunities of ERW deployment, including the potential for excess industrial silicate materials (basalt mine overburden, concrete, and iron and steel slag) to obviate the need for new mining, as well as uncertainties in soil weathering rates and land-ocean transfer of weathered products.- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. India.
- Subjects
POLITICS & government of India, 1977- ,GROSS domestic product ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
A country report for India is presented from publisher CountryWatch, Inc., with topics including political conditions of the country, economic conditions such as gross domestic product (GDP), and environmental policy of the country.
- Published
- 2017
48. Climate policy strength compared: China, the US, the EU, India, Russia, and Japan.
- Author
-
Compston, Hugh and Bailey, Ian
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
The few systematic international comparisons of climate policy strength made so far have serious weaknesses, particularly those that assign arbitrary weightings to different policy instrument types in order to calculate an aggregate score for policy strength. This article avoids these problems by ranking the six biggest emitters by far – China, the US, the EU, India, Russia, and Japan – on a set of six key policy instruments that are individually potent and together representative of climate policy as a whole: carbon taxes, emissions trading, feed-in tariffs, renewable energy quotas, fossil fuel power plant bans, and vehicle emissions standards. The results cast strong doubt on any idea that there is a clear hierarchy on climate policy with Europe at the top: the EU does lead on a number of policies but so does Japan. China, the US, and India each lead on one area. Russia is inactive on all fronts. At the same time climate policy everywhere remains weak compared to what it could be. Policy relevance This study enables climate policy strength, defined as the extent to which the statutory provisions of climate policies are likely to restrict GHG emissions if implemented as intended, to be assessed and compared more realistically across space and time. As such its availability for the six biggest emitters, which together account for over 70% of global CO2emissions, should facilitate international negotiations (1) by giving participants a better idea of where major emitters stand relative to each other as far as climate policy stringency is concerned, and (2) by identifying areas of weakness that need action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Multi-level climate governance in India: the role of the states in climate action planning and renewable energies.
- Author
-
Jörgensen, Kirsten, Mishra, Arabinda, and Sarangi, Gopal K.
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *CLIMATE change , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *STRATEGIC planning , *MULTI-level governance (Theory) - Abstract
This article sheds light on multi-level climate governance in the particular context of India and scrutinizes the role India’s subnational states play in climate policy. It uses an analytical lens that combines multi-level climate governance and “laboratories of experimentation”. The first part of the article clarifies the analytical concept of the article and deals with the phenomenon of states experimentation in multi-level climate governance structures from a theoretical background. The second part of the article explores India’s multi-level climate governance structure and sheds light on the role of India’s states therein with specific emphasis on the development of renewable energy. The third part looks at the multi-tiered climate action planning processes, and considers how central top-down policies and subnational bottom-up approaches are linked. Asking whether the Indian states do not only act as mere implementers of federal top-down policies, but instead create own initiatives for climate action. The article examines state climate action plans with particular focus on renewable energy initiatives integrated in the plans by asking whether the Indian states do not act solely as mere implementers of federal top-down policies, but instead create their own initiatives for climate action, much like the German Bundesländer, for example. Based on document analysis and interviews the article explores whether India’s states experiment with individual approaches to develop renewable energy which are, tailored to regional specifics, or whether they mainly implement national objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Assessing the effectiveness of policies in sustaining and promoting ecosystem services in the Indian Himalayas.
- Author
-
Badola, Ruchi, Hussain, Syed Ainul, Dobriyal, Pariva, and Barthwal, Shivani
- Subjects
- *
ECOSYSTEM services , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *CLIMATE change , *GLOBALIZATION & the environment - Abstract
We examined existing policy instruments of the Indian forest, wildlife, and environment sectors for the period 1927–2008 to (a) assess their strengths and weaknesses in addressing information, market and policy failures in ecosystem service provision in the Indian Himalayan region and (b) determine if they were informatory or regulatory in nature and whether they encouraged the use of market-based instruments. Our analysis revealed that Indian policy measures can be categorized into four eras: Production (1927–1972), Protection (1972–1988), Community Participation (1988–2006), and Climate Change and Globalization (2006 onwards). The policies of the earlier two eras were largely regulatory in nature. From 1988 onwards, community participation in biodiversity conservation has made the policies more informatory and market-based. The recognition that Himalayas are a distinct ecosystem, crucial for their services but vulnerable to climate change impacts, has come about only with the National Mission on Sustaining Himalayan Ecosystem. Given the multiple stakeholders in Indian Himalayas and the off-site nature of ecosystem services, a complementarity of instruments and their ability to address the consequences of local decisions on downstream ecosystem services are essential. A participatory and sectorally coordinated mixed governance approach is needed to sustain ecosystem services in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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