The problem, of course, has not surfaced all of a sudden; it is the outcome of years of neglect to rising levels of pollution that are less visible and hence remain unnoticed and unaddressed. The recent smog created a general scare forcing the government to take action since it can be seen and also felt instantly for causing a burning sensation in the eyes. Factories using such highly noxious materials for fuel like rubber tyres, and farmers burning rice crop stubble were ordered to stop the activities. Smog across the border in northern India, especially in New Delhi, was just as bad, if not worse. Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif wrote a letter to his counterpart in Indian Punjab, saying it is in the interest of both sides to make collective efforts towards indentifying technologies and business methods that may eliminate the need to burn rice stubble and help control smog formation. Although some sceptics saw that as an attempt to shift the responsibility for the issue, it is a much welcome initiative that can help fight a common challenge, and perhaps create a constituency for peace.
That though won't be enough. Governments in all the four provinces as well as at the Centre must get serious about adopting longer-term strategies, in the light of expert opinion, to combat pollution. In fact, they do not need go too far to look for the right solutions. It has been more than a year that the Federal Ministry of Climate Change and the UN Environmental Programme produced a joint Technical Needs Assessment Report which indentified a number of technologies for mitigation strategies in the transport, agriculture, energy and industrial sectors. Those proposals have since remained consigned to the cold storage on the pretext of financial constraints. Nothing should be more important than countering pollution that prematurely kills 21.9 percent (Lancet Commission report statistic) Pakistanis, many of them children, and causes irreparable brain damage to most others.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2017