Bahar Dutt

June , 2008

Thursday , June 05, 2008

Has Indian environmentalism come of age?


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Even the most ardent proponents of industrialism would acknowledge that we are in the midst of an environment crisis. Rates of species extinction are 1000 times more than what they were before human beings dominated the earth. The rate of carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere is 30 times more than when the Industrial revolution started. Urban India is slowly waking up to this inconvenient truth. The Outlook-CNN-IBN-CSDS "State of Environment in Indian Cities" is an attempt to gauge precisely this- assess the level of awareness, attitudes, perception and concerns of the people about the state of environment in their country The survey- has thrown up some startling results. Indians consider environment to be the Number Two problem beating unemployment, law and order and even corruption. In a similar survey conducted in the UK the British considered environment as Number Five on their list of social....


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More about Bahar Dutt

Bahar Dutt is a wildlife conservationist by training. She has worked for the last ten years on crucial wildlife conservation projects in India and abroad. In England she worked at the world famous Jersey Zoo set up by naturalist Gerald Durrell and was involved in assessing the conditions for release of endangered primate in the Amazon forests. . She has over 10 awards to her credit including the Ramnath Goenka Award in 2006 and the Wildscreen Award , UK and the Young Environment Journalist Award 2007. As an environment editor at CNN-IBN she has done a range of stories travelling to far and forgotten corners of this country to expose the nexus between the mining mafia, politicians and corporates. She has posed as a furniture maker to expose the illegal trade in banned timber in the Western Ghats, and the nexus between the police and a mining company in the Niyamgiri hills of Orissa. One of her most dramatic exposés involved a cement company of global dimensions that had been operating illegally in the forests of Meghalaya on the India-Bangladesh border. More recently, she and the CNN-IBN team exposed the operations of a miner in Goa who had illegally devastated forest lands. Their story led to the shut down of the mine.
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