Saturday, July 23, 2016

A step toward "Climate Change"

After a long time I had came back to write a post in my blog. As my friends inspired me to come back and write a post here.
Today I am going to discuss all that our Indian government had taken best steps and reforms toward the climate change. Earlier I requested and discussed about the social efforts that should be taken by us. But now our government had came forward to "Save our Earth".

It was the day 26th May 2014, when our newly appointed Prime Minister Narendra Modi took the oath of Indian Prime Minister. From that day India had started its change India policy as need by ever people. Each and every place came in transformation. That day was a very bright day for India. when we got a best Prime Minister who only think of development and a corruption free India.

Our country PM had taken several initiative to make India clean and climate change too. He introduced a an agreement toward whole world. That agreement was "Paris agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change" which was held in Paris. In this agreement around 178 countries had signed the agreement.
In this agreement all countries had to set a target/goal for a certain period like year 2020, in which country had take efforts to reduce the pollution and global warming too.

According to my knowledge India had took step toward this agreement in which they had set a target to reduced it's emission intensity of its GDP by 33 to 35 percent by year 2030. This will be a big effort from our government till now. If it gets successful then it would be great achievement. Similarly many other countries had come forward for its reduction of emission intensity.
Many countries are moving toward no fossil fuel usage. It is life saver for our earth. We should shift toward our natural resources like Wind Energy, Solar Energy,etc.

Our ministries like Railways, Urban Development all are working toward the use of such resources.
Recently our Rail Minister "Mr. Suresh Prabhu" had announced that very soon all the train coaches will have a solar panel at the roof and it will be used as the energy for trains. Government is encouraging fuels like BioFuel, CNG,etc. This will make our India a less polluted country which indirectly mean that our earth will come out from ICU or danger which we people had made for earth.
Recently many states is installing a Solar Panel in large area for the solar power house through that they can provide electricity to the state. I had read recently that one country who had surplus electricity that they pay to customer against using the electricity. when I read this then I wondered that does it possible but it was true. Some country is fully using the solar power electricity. Such things make so happy that I think we are still together for protection of our earth. As Indian language we say our earth as mother, i.e. we represent our earth as "Mother"(in Hindi "рдоां" which mean woman who give birth to child and takes care of their children at any cost). So we all know that whole world is our family and we are directly or indirectly in a strong and unique relationship. So I would like that we should come forward and help our respective government in their initiatives to make them successful and we should also take care of our mother.

At last I would like to share a recent event which was organised in our India that was plantation of tree. This event came in news as in that event on July 11th 2016.They had planted 50 Million plants and set a record in Guinness Book of World Record. This had again shown that social power and efforts can do anything. So we should always be together in ever moment even in bad situations like terrorism as they don't have any religion.

I am happy to share my thoughts and it would be very pleasure that you suggest something against this blog. This post is all about my own thoughts and experience.
Hope to write soon my new post.
:-)

Monday, June 3, 2013

PLANT TREE TO SAVE EARTH

One Person One Tree..... Request from your brother

My Dear Brother and Sister, I request you all to plant a tree and follow the indian policy i.e. "One person one Plant". and please take care of that plant like their own child. so this request is from your brother. because we have to save the earth.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013


Benefits for using Jute Bags 

Durability Jute Bags are most durable than other bags. It is not easy to tear like those of Plastic and Paper. Life Time of the Bag may be more than five years. Your Logo printed on these bags will thus get more mileage. 

Advertisement People will use smart and useful bags in other areas after getting the bag from the Company. Nowadays people need bags which can be used in multiple options -- it should carry weight also. (Jute Bags can carry 15-40 kgs. Approx. weight depending on size.) 

Reduced Cost in Advertisement If the Bags are durable it will always be seen in the hands of people after a time when it is widely distributed. In comparison with the Cost of Advertisement today use of Jute Carry Bags is the most economic way for advertisement. 

Brand Image If a customer gets quality service in the Hotel and in addition with it a Courtesy durable Bag is provided to the Customer, he will be more than satisfied when he goes back home. Whenever he will use or see the Carry bag again for some other purposes he will be bound to think about the quality of Service provided to him in the Hotel. 

Cost Depends on the Quality of Jute bag approved by the Buyer. In cases it is cheaper than Paper Bags and vice-versa according to the quality of Jute Fabric chosen. 

Eco-Friendly Jute is biodegradable and is thus Environmentally Friendly when compared to plastic. In certain countries plastic bags are banned. 

Customer Interest Generally Ladies/Women do most of the shopping, if they get a fancy Carry bag from a Store (Hotel Shop), they will be more than happy which will also make them to visit the Store again. 

Word of Mouth Ladies / Women are found to be the best for Word of Mouth advertisement in case of shopping. New innovative ideas are always discussed amongst their group / friend circle or family. 

Bihar village sets example by planting trees on birth of girls

Planting of trees by families on birth of a girl child, the theme of Bihar’s tableau in this year’s Republic Day parade, has worked wonders for a village in Bhagalpur by improving the environment and providing financial security to girls.
The tradition in Dharhara village, about 40 km from Bhagalpur, was popularized by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar who was so impressed by it that he decided to launch a welfare scheme “Pahli Kilkari Yojna” from there on Environment Day last year, official sources said.
According to the practise, a family plants a fruit bearing tree on the birth of a girl child. The fruits provide financial insurance for the girl as the family deposits the money by selling them in her name.
The money, which multiplies in the course of time, is spent during the marriage of the girl.
BJP spokesman and Bhagalpur MP Shahnawaz Hussain told PTI that the tradition has proved a boon for the girl child.
“The village sends an important message not only to other parts of Bihar but outside too...it should be popularized across the country,” Mr. Hussain added.
Besides, financially empowering the girl, the custom has a positive impact on the environment of the area, he said.
Sub-Divisional Officer (SDO) of Naughachia, Sushil Kumar said the government provides all possible help to the village to encourage this practise which has spread to many other neighbouring areas.
Subodh Kumar Kushwaha, a villager, said due to this healthy tradition, everyone feels happy on birth of a girl child in their family.
Locals said earlier people used to plant seesam (Indian Rosewood) tree on the occasion but it was not successful as the tree started decaying due to some unknown disease, besides taking a long time in maturing. This prompted people to go for cash-rich trees like banana and mango.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Pollution of our Holy river Ganga

Most ancient civilizations grew along the banks of rivers. Even today, millions of people all over the world live on the banks of rivers and depend on them for their survival.All of us have seen a river - large or small, either flowing through our town, or somewhere else. Rivers are nothing more than surface water flowing down from a higher altitude to a lower altitude due to the pull of gravity. One river might have its source in a glacier, another in a spring or a lake. Rivers carry dissolved minerals, organic compounds, small grains of sand, gravel, and other material as they flow downstream. Rivers begin as small streams, which grow wider as smaller streams and rivers join them along their course across the land. Eventually they flow into seas or oceans. Unfortunately most of the world's major rivers are heavily polluted.

The pollution of environment is the ‘gift’ of the industrial revolution. Prior to this the agrarian cultures created significant environmental deterioration in the form of soil erosion- through deforestation and overgrazing. The environmental degradation is a by product of modern civilization.

There has been a steady deterioration in the quality of water of Indian rivers over several decades. India’s fourteen major, 55 minor and several hundred small rivers receive millions of litres of sewage, industrial and agricultural wastes. Most of these rivers have been rendered to the level of sewage flowing drains. There are serious water quality problems in the cities, towns and villages using these waters. Water borne diseases are rampant, fisheries are on decline, and even cattle are not spared from the onslaught of pollution.
According to World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) five rivers in Asia serving over 870 million people are among the most threatened in the world, as dams, water extraction and climate change all take their toll.
The Ganges, Indus, Yangtze, Salween-Nu and Mekong-Lancang rivers make up half of the WWF’s “top ten” most threatened river basins.
India has a large number of rivers that are lifelines for the millions living along their banks. These rivers can be categorized into four groups:1.Rivers that flow down from the Himalayas and are supplied by melting snow and glaciers. This is why these are perennial, that is, they never dry up during the year.2. The Deccan Plateau Rivers, which depend on rainfall for their water.3. The coastal rivers, especially those on the west coast, which are short and do not retain water throughout the year.4. The rivers in the inland drainage basin of west Rajasthan, which depend on the rains. These rivers normally drain towards silt lakes or flow into the sand.
River Ganga (Ganges) of India has been held in high esteem since time immemorial and Hindus from all over the world cherish the idea of a holy dip in the river under the faith that by doing so they will get rid of their sins of life. More than 400 million people live along the Ganges River. An estimated 2,000,000 persons ritually bathe daily in the river. Historically also, Ganga is the most important river of the country and beyond doubt is closely connected with the history of civilization as can be noticed from the location of the ancient cities of Hardwar, Prayag, Kashi and Patliputra at its bank. To millions of people it is sustainer of life through multitude of canal system and irrigation of the wasting load. Hundreds of the villages and even the big cities depend for their drinking water on this river. It is believed, a fact which has also been observed, that the water of Ganga never decays even for months and years when water of other rivers and agencies begins to develop bacteria and fungi within a couple of days. This self purification characteristic of Ganga is the key to the holiness and sanctity of its water. The combination of bacteriophages and large populations of people bathing in the river have apparently produced a self-purification effect, in which water-borne bacteria such as dysentery and cholera are killed off, preventing large-scale epidemics. The river also has an unusual ability to retain dissolved oxygen.
With growing civilization and population all over how long Ganga will retain its self purification characteristics only time can judge.       
SOURCES:

The Gangotri  Glacier, a vast expanse of ice five miles by fifteen, at the foothills of the Himalayas (14000 ft) in North Uttar Pradesh is the source of Bhagirathi, which joins with Alaknanda (origins nearby) to form Ganga at the craggy canyon-carved town of Devprayag. Interestingly, the sources of Indus and the Brahmaputra are also geographically fairly close; the former goes through Himachal Pradesh and fans out through Punjab and Sind (Pakistan) into the Arabian Sea. The latter courses for most of its tremendous length under various names through Tibet/China, never far from the Nepal or Indian borders, and then takes a sharp turn near the northeastern tip of India, gathers momentum through Assam before joining the major stream of the Ganga near Dacca in Bangladesh to become the mighty Padma, river of joy and sorrow for much of Bangladesh. From Devprayag to the Bay of Bengal and the vast Sunderbans delta , the Ganga flows some 1550 miles, passing (and giving life to) some of the most populous cities of India, including Kanpur (2 million), Allahabad, Varanasi, Patna, and Calcutta (14 million).

The largest tributary to the Ganga is the Ghaghara, which meets it before Patna, in Bihar, bearing much of the Himalayan glacier melt from Northern Nepal. The Gandak, which comes from near Katmandu, is another big Himalayan tributary. Other important rivers that merge with the Ganga are the Son, which originates in the hills of Madhya Pradesh, the Gomti which flows past Lucknow.
Previous Work:
A number of investigations have been carried out on the physiochemical and biological characters of the Ganga. Lakshminarayana (1965) published a series of papers reporting the results of studies carried out at Varanasi during the period between March, 1957 and March, 1958. it was observed by him that the values of the most of the parameters decreased during rainy season while no marked variation was observed during winters and summers.
In the same year Chakraborty et.al. (1965) from Kanpur reported the water quality of Ganga at J.K. Rayon’s water intake point and at Golaghat and Bhairoghat pumping stations situated at the upstream of the river. It was concluded that the water quality gradually deteriorated as it passes from Bhairoghat pumping station to the J.K. Rayon water intake point in summers because in this stretch the river received waste waters from number of sewage drains.
 A year later Saxena et.al. (1966) made a systematic survey of the chemical quantity of Ganga at Kanpur. According to the study, the biological oxygen demand, i.e. B.O.D. varied from 5.3ppm (minimum) in winter to 16.0ppm (maximum) in summer. The chloride ranged between 9.2 and 12.7 ppm and the river was found to be alkaline in nature except in rainy season. He concluded that the tanneries significantly increased the pollution load of river as they discharge huge amounts of effluents containing organic wastes and heavy metals. It was further reported that forty five tanneries, ten textile mills and several other industrial units discharged 37.15 million gallon per day of waste water generating BOD load of approximately 61630 Kg/day.
Subsequently Agarwal et.al. (1976) studied the bacteriological population of the river water and concluded that addition of untreated waste and sewage was responsible for the presence of pathogenic organisms posing threat to the residents of the Varanasi city.
Hydrobiological features of the river Ganga was studied by  Pahwa and Mehrotra (1966). The authors studied a stretch of 1090 kms. of river Ganga extending from Kanpur in west to Rajmahal, in Jharkhand state, in the east. They reported that the turbidity was maximum (1100-2170 ppm) in monsoon and minimum ( less than100 ppm) during January to June. The pH of the river water ranged between 7.45 (minimum) during June to August and 8.30 (maximum) during January to May. The dissolved oxygen, i.e. D.O. count ranged from 5.0 to 10.5 ppm with maximum values during January and February. While the minimum values were recorded in monsoon.
Bhargava (1982) in a survey of total length of the river Ganga found that quality index was far above the prescribed limit at Kanpur. He further found that the Ganga water was having unusually fast regenerating capacity by bringing down B.O.D. owing to the presence of large amount of well adopted micro-organisms. According to the research Ganga is rich in polymers excreted by various species of bacteria. These polymers being excellent coagulants remove turbidity by coagulation, setting the suspended particles at the sewage discharge point.
At the 1981 session of Indian Science Congress at Varanasi, scientists expressed concern at the growing pollution in the river Ganga in presence of the then Prime Minister Mrs. Indira Gandhi who inaugurated the session. At her instance, Dr. M.S. Swaminathan, the then member, Planning Commission asked the Central Board for Preventation and Control of Water Pollution, New Delhi to conduct studies on the state of the river Ganga. In collaboration with the State Pollution Control Boards of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Bengal and the centre for study of Man and Environment Kolkata (Calcutta), studies were conducted on the ‘Sources’ of pollution including all human activities, land use pattern and water quality of the river at selected sites during 1981-82 and report entitled “Basin, sub-basin inventory of water pollution in the Ganga basin part-II” was published in 1984. according to this report sewage of 27 class I cities and towns and effluents from 137 major industries were the main source of pollution of the river. In addition cremation of dead human bodies and dumping of carcasses aggrevated the pollution of the river.
It was Chandra (1981) who conducted studies on the pollution status of river Ganga at Allahabad, pointed out that industries manufacturing nitrogenous fertilizers have significant role in polluting the river water. 
Study carried out in 1986-87 on physico-chemical properties of river Ganga water at Buxar (Unnao) clearly revealed that extent of pollution varied in different seasons. Usually all the 23 parameters studied showed high values in summer and lower during monsoons except turbidity which was high in rainy season. Values of BOD, COD, DO and H2S were recorded high than the tolerance limits.
Study on water quality of river Ganga at Kalakankar (Pratapgarh in Uttar Pradesh) revealed that even at such a remote and undisturbed place like Kalakankar the river water was not safe for drinking and bathing. It was also noted that the river showed an alkaline trend throughout the course of study.
According to the research done by Mehrotra (1990), the various sources responsible for pollution of the river in Varanasi city are domestic sewage effluents of the industries, burning of dead bodies at the ghats, use of detergents, insecticides and pesticides used in agriculture. Study revealed the presence of toxic metals like  mercury ( 65 to 520ppb), Lead( less than 10 to 800 ppm), chromium (less than 10 to 200 ppm) and nickel (less than 10 to 130 ppm) in the sediments of Ganga river at Varanasi city.   
Upstream from Varanasi, one of the major pilgrimage sites along the river, the water is comparatively pure, having a lowBiochemical oxygen demand  and fecal coliform count. Studies conducted in 1983 on water samples taken from the right bank of the Ganga at Patna confirm that escheria coli  (E.Coli.), fecal streptococci and vibrio cholerae organisms die two to three times faster in the Ganga than in water taken from the rivers Son and Gandak and from dug wells and tube wells in the same area.
The chemical pollution of the river Ganga in Patna city in Bihar state has been found somewhat alarming beside the storm drain, especially in the regions like Rajapur, Mandiri and Krishnaghat.
According to the report published in a book by Mr. U.K. Sinha (1986), the concentration of iron is higher in sediments collected from 10 metres along the bank at Mandiri region. The concentration of all the toxic metals i.e copper, zinc, nickel and cobalt are higher in all the sediments collected from near the storm drain and diminishes towards mid-region of the river. The concentration of zinc is highest in the sediments collected from near the Mandiri storm drain, Antaghat storm drain and Krishnaghat storm drain.
The concentration of copper is highest in the sediments collected from near the Krishnaghat storm drain suggesting the presence copper due to utensil work being done in Thatheri Bazar and hospital wastes also, said report.
Present situation:
For some time now, this romantic view of the Ganges has collided with India's grim realities. During the past three decades, the country's explosive growth (at nearly 1.2 billion people, India's population is second only to China's), industrialization and rapid urbanization have put unyielding pressure on the sacred stream.

Ganga, the most sacred of rivers for Hindus, has become polluted for some years now. But a recent study by Uttarakhand Environment Conservation and Pollution Control Board says that the level of pollution in the holy river has reached alarming proportions.

Things have come to such a pass that the Ganga water is at present not fit just for drinking and bathing but has become unusable even for agricultural purposes.
As per the UECPCB study, while the level of coliform present in water should be below 50 for drinking purposes, less than 500 for bathing and below 5000 for agricultural use—the present level of coliform in Ganga at Haridwar has reached 5500.

Based on the level of coliform, dissolved oxygen and biochemical oxygen, the study put the water in A, B, C and D categories. While A category is considered fit for drinking, B for bathing, C for agriculture and D is for excessive pollution level.

Since the Ganga waters at Haridwar have more than 5000 coliform and even the level of dissolved oxygen and biochemical oxygen doesn't conform the prescribed standards, it has been put in the D category.

According to the study, the main cause of high level of coliform in Ganga is due to disposal of human faeces, urine and sewage directly into the river from its starting point in Gaumukh till it reaches Haridwar via Rishikesh.

Nearly 89 million litres of sewage is daily disposed into Ganga from the 12 municipal towns that fall along its route till Haridwar. The amount of sewage disposed into the river increases during the Char Dham Yatra season when nearly 15 lakh pilgrims visit the state between May and October each year.

Apart from sewage disposal of half-burnt human bodies at Haridwar and hazardous medical waste from the base hospital at Srinagar due to absence of an incinerator are also adding to pollution levels in the Ganga.

The result has been the gradual killing of one of India's most treasured resources. One stretch of the Yamuna River, the Ganges' main tributary, has been devoid of all aquatic creatures for at least a decade.

In Varanasi, India's most sacred city, the coliform bacterial count is at least 3,000 times higher than the standard established as safe by the United Nations world Health  Organization.  Coliform are rod-shaped bacteria that are normally found in the colons of humans and animals and become a serious contaminant when found in the food or water supply.

A study by Environmental Biology Laboratory, Department pf Zoology, Patna University, showed the presence of mercury in the Ganga river in Varanasi city. According to the study, annual mean concentration of mercury in the river water was 0.00023 ppm. The concentration ranged from NT (not traceable) to 0.00191 ppm.
Study done by Indian Toxicological Research Centre (ITRC), Lucknow during 1986-1992 showed maximum annual concentration of mercury in the Ganga river water at Rishikesh, Allahabad district and Dakshineswar as 0.081, 0.043 and 0.012 ppb respectively.

Ganga river at Varanasi was found well within the maximum permissible standard of 0.001 ppm prescribed for drinking water by the World Health Organization.
The mercury studied in the Ganga river could be traced in biotic as well as abiotic components of the river at the study site. The Hindu devotees take bath in the river where mercury was detected in 28%, 44%,75%, 96%, 42% and 89% of the river water, sediment, benthic fauna, fish, soil and vegetation samples respectively.

Though mercury contamination of the river water has not reached an alarming extent, its presence in the river system is worrisome. In the study annual mean concentration of the metal in the sediments was 0.067 ppm. Sediments constitute a major pool of mercury in fresh water.

As Ganga enters the Varanasi city, Hinduism’s sacred river contains 60,000 faecal coliform bacteria per 100 millilitres, 120 times more than is considered safe for bathing. Four miles downstream, with inputs from 24 gushing sewers and 60,000 pilgrim-bathers, the concentration is 3,000 times over the safety limit. In places, the Ganges becomes black and septic. Corpses, of semi-cremated adults or enshrouded babies, drift slowly by.

The tannery industry mushrooming in North India has converted the Ganga River into a dumping ground. The tanning industry discharges different types of waste into the environment, primarily in the form of liquid effluents containing organic matters, chromium, sulphide ammonium and other salts. As per an estimate, about 80-90% of the tanneries use chromium as a tanning agent. Of this, the hides take up only 50-70%, while the rest is discharged as effluent. Pollution becomes acute when tanneries are concentrated in clusters in small area like Kanpur. Consequently, the Leather-tanning sector is included in the Red category of industries due to the potential adverse environmental impact caused by tannery wastes.

Highly polluted sediments are adversely affecting the ecological functioning of rivers due to heavy metal mobilization from urban areas into biosphere. Distribution of heavy metals in sediments of the river Ganga and its tributaries have been carried out by several workers. Monitoring of Ganga River from Rishikesh to Varanasi indicated that Kannauj to Kanpur and Varanasi are the most polluted stretches of the river Ganga . Analysis of upstream and down stream water and sediment revealed a 10-fold increase in chromium level.

saurabh kumar and report of Nitish Priyedashni