Ministry of Environment, Forest, and Climate Change (MoEFCC) launched the The
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) in 2019 with an aim to go on till the year
2024, loomed large over the then newly elected government’s policy landscape.
This piece here sheds light upon the flaws and the opportunities that were
missed in the NCAP and suggestive reforms for the same.
Flaws
NCAP was a missed opportunity to outline a systematic strategy. Beyond the
national outreach and the reduction targets, it is a compilation of ongoing
efforts and leaves the details of new efforts to future action plans. Specific
gaps include
- NCAP is largely a continuation of the traditional policy approach of
developing long lists of unprioritized action points. It does not put
implementation capacity at the heart of designing our mitigation policies,
thus risking no implementation.
- The program is urban-centric, focusing on a limited group of cities, and
following the National Capital Region template by relying on city action
plans. However, air pollution is not restricted to cities, and air quality
in cities is typically influenced significantly by sources from outside.
Addressing this problem requires moving the conversation towards addressing
pollution at regional ‘airshed’ levels, and having a more flexible system
boundaries for air pollution control. The NCAP does not outline a road map for defining these
airsheds and developing processes that cut across jurisdictions and departments.
- NCAP misses addressing governance gaps directly. It introduces new committees
at the central and state levels and declares that individual ministries will
‘institutionalize’ action points in their charge. However, it does not specify
what institutionalizing entails, and who would be held responsible if targets
are not met, and what legal or financial implications would follow.
To strengthen the NCAP, there is a need to focus efforts on a prioritized
shortlist of solutions in the short term, improve the enforcement of the
capacity of the PCBs while increasing their accountability, and begin
extensively consultations about governance reforms needed in the longer term.
Some of the suggestive reforms can be –
Prioritizing concrete actions- Prioritizing solutions need active consideration
of the implementation capacity needed to introduce measures and enforce them. In
addition, we need to ensure that the program does not adversely impact
vulnerable groups. In particular, with dispersed sources of pollution, such as
transportation, households, waste burning, and construction dust, administrative
solutions that require monitoring and enforcement are likely to fail.
Instead,
enforcement could work better for policy changes targeted at higher, more
centralized levels, where possible. For instance, with vehicles, although there
is a pollution control mechanism in place, several issues inhibit inspections
from being a reliable way to keep the on-road fleet within standards. These
include low rates of compliance among vehicle owners in getting tested and
compromised inspections.
Policy changes aimed higher up in the manufacturing
process, such as the requirement to comply with Bharat Stage VI norms are likely
to be better implemented. Keeping these factors in mind, two key priority areas
within the NCAP are identified below.
- Power plant emission norms:
India’s formal regulatory infrastructure has traditionally focused on ‘point
sources’, with good reason. Industries and power plants burning coal are the
second and third largest sources in India (only behind the numerous but
highly dispersed household sources of emissions), in terms of contributions
to average national exposure to air pollution and the resultant burden of
disease.
Power plants are the largest source of sulfur dioxide and a major source of
nitrogen oxide. Sulfur and nitrogen oxides are key precursors that react
with other substances to produce secondary particulate matter. MoEFCC introduced new emissions standards for power plants in 2015,
which required the installation of pollution control equipment. Although the
power plants were required to comply with these standards by 2017, the Central
Pollution Control Board (CPCB) later announced that the compliance date had been
pushed to 2022, as per a timeline prepared by the Central Electricity Authority.
- Invest in public transportation:
Reducing transportation emissions would
require a combination of ensuring easy access to affordable public and
non-motorized transport, while simultaneously working on reducing emissions from
the vehicles on the road. Investments in clean public transport can reduce
transport emissions as well as make mobility easier and cheaper, thereby
improving the quality of life in cities. Planning the public transit strategy
for the long term is key.
Do we need to strengthen the regulations?
Clearly yes. The formal air pollution regulatory architecture in India is built
around the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 and Air (Prevention and Control of
Pollution) Act, 1981. As per existing law, the state PCBs have very limited
flexibility to take action proportional to the polluting activity. Currently,
they can send show-cause notices, shut down industries through a closure notice
or by shutting access to utilities, cancel regulatory consents, or initiate
criminal prosecution by taking the industries to court.
With court cases taking
several years to reach any meaningful conclusion, PCBs rarely pursue this route,
and restrict themselves to either a rap on the wrist through show-cause notices,
or shut down the industries – making enforcement expensive and ineffective.
Strengthening the ability of the PCBs to tackle point sources could provide a
pathway to a broader reform process. India requires modern governance structures
and the NCAP is largely silent on how this structure could look.
Some suggestions to strengthen regulatory capacities are:
- Increased resources of PCBs: Human resources currently available in PCBs
are not sufficient to meet their mandate. There is a need to rapidly expand
their capacity, particularly on the technical side. In the short term,
existing vacancies in the CPCB need to be filled with qualified people. Working with CPCB
and the states, filling up vacancies in the state PCBs should be another
area of priority. Increased staff resources should translate to increased
inspections and monitoring.
- Increased accountability through public disclosure of regulatory data:
The operations of the PCBs are extremely opaque, and it is unclear to the
public where the big polluting sources are, and whether they are compliant
with regulatory norms. Ensuring that PCBs release regulatory information
(details of consents granted, inspections, online monitoring data,
enforcement actions, etc.) into the public, the domain would make the
industries and state PCBs more accountable to local communities, civil
society, and the media.
- Remove legal barriers for effective enforcement: There is a need for
statutorily empowering PCBs so that they can initiate systematic and
proportional responses to polluting activities. Amending the law to allow
for a more diverse regulatory toolbox, which includes both existing powers
and additional ones such as levying financial penalties would increase the
flexibility of the PCBs and make them more responsive.
Conclusion
Air pollution is a complex problem, with multiple sources operating at
different regional scales, under the jurisdictions of disparate agencies, and
requiring a variety of mitigation measures. We need to unambiguously acknowledge
the terrible impacts of air pollution on our health, move beyond the
urban-centric approach, and tackle each of the big sources with a sense of
urgency.
The policy for tackling air pollution needs to shift from the reactive
approach we have taken so far to one that is more systematic:
focusing on some
efforts in the near term, and beginning the process to reform our environment
institutions to make them better resourced as well as more nimble and effective
in the longer term.
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