Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumUndrinkable Water And Air That's Worse Than Beijing - Welcome To Delhi
Ed. - You'll need to click through for the photographs. It's worth it, though - "appalling" is really the only word that fits.
To get a glimpse of what its like to live in these conditions, photographer Matthieu Paley spent five days walking across Delhi. Through his photographs, we see the physical results of intense urbanization, density of cars, and the practice of burning refuse. All contribute to the thick, yellow haze over the city. Even the sacred Yamuna River isnt exempt from severe pollution. The river is second only to the Ganges in religious significance to practicing Hindus, and for 855 miles (1,376 kilometers) it flows through India, providing water to 57 million people. Eighty percent of the pollution in the river enters along the 14-mile (22.5-kilometer) stretch that goes through Delhi. Soil erosion, waste disposal, and chemical runoff leave the waters black in some places and covered with a white film in others.
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In October 2014, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a national campaign called Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, meaning Clean India Mission. While it sounds well-intentioned, the announcement came one week after the announcement for a campaign called Make In India, which encourages international corporations to bring their manufacturing jobs to Indiaa goal many see as contradictory to promoting a cleaner environment.
The CSE has been critical of these campaigns, and in 2015 it released a report saying that the governments budget revealed no strategy for moving forward with environmental policy. Deputy Director Chandra Bhushan wrote, The bottom-line is, be it air pollution, water pollution or municipal solid waste, managing environmental degradation requires massive investments in infrastructure.
While Delhi may have waste-treatment plants, it lacks the necessary sewer infrastructure that would carry the waste there. Paley noticed that even aboveground he often couldn't find basic infrastructure like public trash cans. There have been times I've had garbage in my hands and I've had to carry it with me all day, because there are no bins anywhere, he remembered.
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http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/04/160425-new-delhi-most-polluted-city-matthieu-paley/
yourpaljoey
(2,166 posts)mopinko
(70,104 posts)in mumbai, there is a park. a park.
the day we visited there were crows and vultures everywhere.
no song birds, just these scavengers. why?
the park is atop a cliff. looking straight down from the cliff is a place where there are "sky burials". a religious sect (i dont remember which one) owns that spot, and the dead are laid out on an alter-like rock. the scavengers eat them.
on their off days, they hang in the park.
we also visited agra, and the taj mahal. our hotel room had a view of the taj, but also of the orchard wall that was the public toilet.
india has a long road ahead of it.