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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
Extracts from Introductory Remarks
by Prime Minister at the Meeting of PMs Council
on Climate Change on the National Mission on Sustaining
the Himalayan Eco-system
October 26, 2009, New Delhi
Let me thank you for being present for a very important
meeting of this Council, since we are considering a
long-term policy framework to deal with one of the most
serious ecological challenges facing our country, in
fact, facing the entire subcontinent. To my mind, the
National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Eco-System
is one of the most critical of the various Missions
under the National Action Plan on Climate Change. It
impacts directly on Water Security as well as Food Security
and, therefore, involves the livelihood of hundreds
of millions of our people. We all know that the entire
Himalayan zone, including the high mountains, the foothills
and the terai area, constitute an extremely fragile
ecological zone. Over the years, there has been steady
degradation of this sensitive zone as a result of deforestation,
demographic pressures, rapid and often uncontrolled
urbanization and road building and construction with
only marginal attention being paid to environmental
safeguards. Now, however, these stresses and strains
are already beginning to be accentuated by the adverse
consequences of Climate Change. While the larger challenge
of global Climate Change has to be addressed, we need
to prepare our country and people to anticipate and
respond to its consequences. And part of the adaptation
response lies in halting and reversing the ecological
degradation that has already taken place in the Himalayas.
I am happy to see that the Mission document has come
out with a long-term plan to carefully and comprehensively
monitor all the key indicators of climate change phenomena
in the Himalayan zone. We have anecdotal evidence that
glaciers may be receding, but we need precise and carefully
vetted data, both through satellite imaging and ground
surveys. The establishment of a Centre for Glaciological
Studies is welcome. I would also like to compliment
the Minister of Environment and Forests, for the initiative
he has taken to commission a study on Himalayan glaciers
in collaboration with ISRO. This initiative must become
an integral part of this National Mission and must be
institutionalized so that the longer-term trends are
monitored and analysed. Only then would it be possible
to formulate appropriate and effective adaptation strategies.
I am happy that the National Mission has a section
devoted to socio-economic challenges with a set of concrete
immediate and long term measures to deal with them.
The involvement of local communities is indispensable
in ensuring the successful implementation of this Mission.
The reference to drawing upon local and traditional
knowledge and practices is laudable. We must find ways
to institutionalize this. It is extremely important
that we lose no time in implementing the practical measures
that have been identified. While the State Governments
have been sensitized to the need for such measures,
I will invite the Chief Ministers of the Himalayan States
to join in a national effort to safeguard the Himalayan
eco-system. My intention is to institutionalize this
interaction by making it an annual feature.
While a large part of the Himalayan range lies within
Indian territory, there are other countries who share
the mountain ranges with us. These include Nepal, Bhutan,
China and Pakistan. Any comprehensive Climate Change
Action Plan for the entire Himalayan zone will, of course,
require coordinated action among all stakeholder countries.
Some bilateral initiatives are being taken, for example,
with China and with Bhutan. But we have to recognize
the need for much greater engagement and coordination
with all our neighbours which share the Himalayas.
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