Relationship Between Environment and Economic Growth!
Relationship Between Environment and Economic Growth!
The conflict between economic growth and environment is sharper today than ever before,
particularly in developing countries like India with fast growing population and mass poverty.
The developing countries are making strenuous efforts to balance their need for rapid economic
growth with the environmental concerns for keeping their natural base intact.
In India, as in other developing countries, the adoption of development strategy based primarily
on large-scale industrialization, energy-intensive technologies and biochemical-based
agricultural technology, ignoring indigenous development paradigm based on locally self-
sufficient technologies, has led to environmental degradation. In this article, we shall explain
various environmental issues and the adverse impact of climate change and explain the need for
sustainable development.
In a recent conference of state environment ministers held in August 2009, Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh said that the ecological crisis that confronts the country has led to ‘alarming
situation’. He urged upon the State governments to control environment pollution, clean rivers
and fight climate change.
This statement highlights the fact that India’s growth is increasingly taking place at the cost of its
environment. This shows that we have not been taking adequate efforts to ensure sustainable
development. To stop further decline in our natural resources and protect environment from
pollution stringent regulations and incentives are needed. But, as the PM has said, due to rampant
corruption prevailing in the bureaucracy the rules regarding the use of our natural resources and
protection of environment have been flouted with impunity. There are numerous instances when
the Ministry of Environment and Forests has flouted all norms to give clearance to dubious
projects at the cost of environment and communities that depend on it
The topic “environment and development” is so broad that it could easily cover any number of sub-
topics that have already been given their own bibliographies in this series, such as cultural ecology and
human ecology, political ecology, or developing world. Separately, environment is defined here as the
entirety of the physical world consisting of the world’s land masses, oceans, and atmosphere.
Development is defined as the process of growth and change in human social, political, and economic
systems. The two terms have traditionally intersected in developing areas where one or more natural
resources have been utilized to promote economic growth. This intersection has been extended in the
recent literature to include not only the impact of development on environment but also human
perceptions of environment in the development process and the role of non-human actors in
development. “Developing areas” are defined as those places where economic and/or social
development has been slower, hindered, or in some way less than average. This need not refer to
country or continental units of space, nor need it be restricted to the “global south” or “Third World.”
Those terms often connote a homogeneity that research has shown to be problematic.
What is EIA??
Environmental Impact Assessment is defined as an activity designed to identify the impact on the
biogeophysical environment, on man and well-being of legislative proposals, projects, policies,
operational procedures and to interpret and communicate information.