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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PMs opening remarks at the
meeting of the Council on Climate Change
May 28, 2010, New Delhi
I am happy that we are today considering the National
Water Mission and the National Mission on Sustainable
Habitat. Both these Missions are extremely critical
to addressing the issues of mitigation and adaptation
to climate change. As far as the Water Mission is concerned,
it goes without saying that water would be a very major
area of stress in our country in the decades to come.
We need to create a generation conscious of the need
to use this life-supporting resource in the most sustainable
manner. Water has multiple uses and, therefore, its
management is often fragmented. I am happy to see that
the Mission document is focusing on creating an integrated
perspective.
The first step in this direction is a comprehensive
water data base in the public domain and assessment
of the impact of climate change on our water resource.
We need to promote citizen and state action for water
conservation, augmentation and preservation. We need
to focus attention on vulnerable areas especially the
areas where ground water is over exploited. We also
need to promote water use efficiency, all of which call
for basin level integrated water resource management.
As far as the Mission on Sustainable Habitat is concerned,
there are clear areas of action that we need to focus
on.
The most important is the creation of "green standards"
relating to making habitats sustainable and having the
Municipal Law amended to make them enforceable. The
second major area would be the promotion of public transport
in our major cities for which we made a beginning through
the stimulus package. We need to reorient city development
plans to make them facilitative of sustainable habitats.
We need to focus on waste recycling and new technologies
that create energy from waste. There will also be a
set of complementary actions in the areas of capacity
building including changes in the curriculum to create
green engineering professionals. I think that some of
the institutional arrangements proposed to be set up
at the Central, State and District levels require some
discussion. There is inadequate or no political representation
in these bodies. For the Mission to succeed at the ground
level, strong political support is required and peoples'
representative should be co-opted into the process of
planning, implementing and monitoring the Mission activities.
It is a time that we address these tasks with the urgency
they deserve and I am sure that through the deliberations
of this Council we can now finalise the two Missions
and begin to implement them. I look forward to your
comments on the presentations.
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