From jalswaraj@csenews.org Mon Feb 28 12:28:59 2005
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2005 18:40:54 +0530
From: jalswaraj@csenews.org
Reply-To: feedback@csenews.org
To: jalswaraj@csenews.org
Subject: Regulate 'world class' peddlers [CSE news bulletin - Feb. 21]

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CSE's Fortnightly News Bulletin

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An e-bulletin from the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), India, to 
our network of friends and professionals

interested in environmental issues. Scroll to the bottom of this page for 
information on how to unsubscribe.

INSIDE:
- Ecological distemper: Hazards of synthetic colours
- Ballia administration does little to combat arsenic menace
- Regulating 'world-class product makers' (Editorial)
- Bhutan's GNP: Gross National 'Happiness'
- News, analysis, perspectives in Down To Earth magazine
- CSE Training: Documentation and information management

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Latest in science and environment news

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Ecological distemper: Synthetic colours are a mishmash of chemicals, pollute 
the environment and pose serious

health hazards.

Read this article online >>
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=1

----------------------------

Analysis: Dark zone endures

Arsenic contamination of water has crippled many people in the district of 
Ballia (UP), but the local administration

fails to take viable measures to combat the problem. Worse, the 
administration refuses to admit that there is a

crisis

Also read:
- Against arsenic
- More arsenic (Down To Earth archive, Sept 15 issue)

Read these articles online >>
http://www.downtoearth.org.in

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Regulating "world-class product makers"  (Editorial)

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This last fortnight, after two disparate experiences, I came to realise 
there is not much difference between colas

and cars. Let me explain how.

A year ago, we released a study on the cocktail of pesticides we found in 
all soft drinks brands. We argued the

pesticides were in the soft drinks because there were no regulations for 
these drinks in the country. Nobody had

defined what the 'safe' limit for pesticide residues were - ergo, what could 
be legally allowed in these drinks - and

so nobody checked for the toxins we found. The study created an absurd 
history of sorts: it brought Coca-Cola

and PepsiCo together on a common platform (the global myth is they don't 
work well together). In harmonious trill,

the soft drink giants defended their products, saying these met "the best 
global standards". It has also led us, for

the past year, to take up the issue of regulation.

Over a year now, we have been engaged in a committee, set up by the Bureau 
of Indian Standards, to formulate

standards for these products. The process, which includes the two soft drink 
and industry associations, has been

contentious and downright nasty. To cut a long story short, in the latest 
round of sparring to finalise the draft

standards, the companies argued-as they consistently have been - that there 
was no need to regulate their

products so far as pesticide residues were concerned. They were confident 
they were meeting all standards - real

or imaginary - and that we should "trust" them.

The other sticky point was the nature of the standard itself. We insisted 
these products must meet global

standards. But companies and their spokespersons in the industrial 
associations cried foul: tough standards, they

said, will destroy Indian companies. This poor country is full of poorer 
companies. So any talk of protecting public

health through stringent quality standards related to toxins, like 
pesticides or heavy metals, even micro-bacterial

contamination, is a conspiracy to destroy their competitive advantage.

We countered. If there was no investment in cleaning up our food products, 
then nobody had the right to

contaminate them. If we are too poor to regulate pesticides in our food, we 
cannot be rich enough to allow the use

of these modern pesticides in our country. Poverty is no excuse for murder. 
The issue, we countered, is to develop

a strong regulatory system that protects public health and can be used to 
defend the quality of Indian food and

standard-setting processes worldwide.

Secondly, and more simply, this standard merely concerned two of the world's 
largest companies; there were

virtually no small soft drink manufacturers that had not been bought over, 
or gone out of business. I asked: How

can you giants hide behind the spectre of small manufacturers to plead your 
case?

Let's now turn to cars. This week, we also reviewed the introduction of the 
lambda measure - an oxygen sensor

that ensures the highest degree of effectiveness of the catalytic converter 
and the lowest exhaust emissions in a

vehicle. The government of India has introduced new norms to check emissions 
from on-road vehicles, effective

from October 2004. In this notification the government, weak as it always is 
before industry lobbies, does not make

lambda mandatory. It is up to city governments to implement.

We want lambda introduced in Delhi. But, as usual, industry is belligerently 
opposing it. Why? General Motors sums

up their sulk: "We have not given any specification of lambda value for our 
vehicles as this was not a requirement

so far". Lambda is not part of the type approval certificate, the global 
giant says, and so we cannot give you the

lambda measure we follow. But, says this giant, we confirm our products are 
built to high standards. Sounds

familiar, doesn't it? The Coke-Pepsi line of defence: we do not measure 
pesticides because you never asked us to,

but we know we are clean. Trust us.

But trust we cannot. For the Automotive Research Association of India - the 
premier facility based in Pune - has

found to its horror that, of the 23 brand new cars it has tested, as many as 
9 did not pass the lambda test. In

other words these cars, once sold, would run on roads with a faulty air-fuel 
mixture, leading to a sub-optimally

performing catalytic converter. Let's cut the techno-jargon: they will 
pollute, period, and nobody will be the wiser

for it.

The question that emerges from the connection I made is: why is industry 
against regulation? It cannot be done in

India, they say. Why? The cars sold in India are branded and advertised as 
global cars, made by global companies

with global quality standards. The lambda measure was introduced way back in 
1993 in Europe, even earlier in the

us; it has been introduced in Hong Kong and in the Philippines. In all these 
countries, if the vehicle that comes for a

pollution check does not meet the lambda range, it fails the test.

So, why not in India? The automobile industry has no answer. Other than: we 
are the best and if the lambda fails,

it is not our fault. Just like a Coke-Pepsi favourite: pesticides in the 
bottle are not our fault. What can we do if

there are pesticide residues in the groundwater we use? Poor us.

Let us be clear. In this globalisation of unequals, the poverty of countries 
is becoming the biggest excuse for the

mother of all frauds. We will continue to be sold "world class products" by 
"world class" companies thriving in poorly

regulated environments. In other words, we will deserve the industry we get 
because we deserve the government

we get. Poorer us.

- Sunita Narain

Read the complete editorial online >>
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=2

Write to the editor: editor@downtoearth.org.in

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>From Gobar Times

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Getting high on hues

Imagine living in a world without colours! Eating food without colours. A 
Holi without colours...stuff that nightmares

are made of. Right? Colours make up our lives. But when have you last 
thought about colours. Where do they come

from.how are they made.who makes them? Find out...

Read more >>
http://www.gobartimes.org/index.htm

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Environment and Poverty

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Poverty catalyst: Bhutan shifts from Gross National Product to Gross 
National Happiness

The Himalayan nation's developmental strategies are now based on the novel 
but little understood concept of Gross

National Happiness (GNH)

----------------------

Download: Improving unsustainable Western economic systems

Frank Dixon, managing director of an investment research firm, explains why 
the GNH concept is a step forward.

Visit >>
http://www.cseindia.org/programme/pov-env/pov-env.htm

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Also in Down To Earth magazine

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News: High hoopla
Meet on sustainable development of the world's small island states turns out 
to be a fiasco

Read this article online >>
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=3

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Feature: We did our bit
CSE volunteers recall working amongst the tsunami-affected in Nagapattinam, 
Tamil Nadu

Read full article >>
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=4

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Debate: Rhinos can live with tribals
But in Kaziranga, forest officials have no respect for their needs and 
customs

Read this article online >>
http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=5

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Events

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Training on library, information management and documentation
(New Delhi, March 8 -11, 2005)

This programme is meant for documentation and information managers of NGOs, 
voluntary organisations and

corporates; individuals and students

Sample course content:

- Information management: Concept and significance
- Information sourcing
- Information services and products
- Basics of a digital library
- Development and management of an audio-visual library

Last date for receiving nominations: February 28, 2005

For more details, contact Kiran Pandey < kiran@cseindia.org >

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CSE employment alert

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Software developer: Hands-on experience of ASP, ASP.net, Visual Basic, 
Databases (SQL/Oracle/ MySQL). Must

have thorough knowledge of SDLC. MCAs/BEs with 2-3 years' experience, and 
good communication skills are invited

to apply.

For details >>
http://www.cseindia.org/aboutus/joinus/joinus_openings.htm

-------------------------------------------------

CSE films on climate change

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Climate change affects everything - water resources, agriculture, food 
security, human health and more. To

understand the potential impact and dangers of climate change, CSE brings 
you a set of 21 must see films that

give viewers a panoramic perspective on all major issues.

Some of the films are:
- The Greenhouse Effect
- Save The Ozone Layer: Every Action Counts
- Oceans and Climate Change
- Changing Climates : The Future
- Emission Impossible

View complete list >>
http://csestore.cse.org.in/store_popups/water_pac.pdf

Get it >>
http://csestore.cse.org.in/store1.asp?sec_id=4&subsec_id=20
(Absolutely secure gateway)

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