Sustainable Development
The surroundings and real situation
around us are termed as environment. As a social being we are affected by the
social environment, as an economic being, we are concerned with economic
environment and as healthy, energetic and efficient citizens we have to build
healthy physical environment. It is an accepted fact that our proper and
systematic growth can take place if there is congenial economic, social and
physical environment.
Since Independence, India has been
striving to attain rapid economic growth but we have been facing issues like
poverty, inequality, rising population, unemployment and rising prices. From
the ‘Chipko’ Movement lead by Sunderlal Bahuguna to citizens of Bengaluru
protesting against the construction of steel flyover, environmental issues have
slowly but steadily gained importance and respectability.
India’s environment faces a number of
crucial challenges such as land degradation, biodiversity loss, air pollution
(especially vehicular pollution), and solid waste management. Some of these
challenges can be attributed to rapid increase in our economic activities,
urbanisation, and rising population. It is because of this that the concept of
‘sustainable development’ has gathered momentum in India.
The United Nations had constituted a
commission, namely Brundtland Commission in 1983 to study the world’s
environmental problems. The commission submitted a report titled ‘Our Common
Future’. The commission defined sustainable development as “the process of
development which meets the needs of the present generation without
compromising the ability of future generation to meet their own needs”.
Sustainable development aims at
increasing not only production but also the productivity. This results in an
increase of real goods and services, but not limited to money value of goods
and services. Sustainable development makes the economy self-sufficient and
self-reliant by emphasising on rational use of natural resources and pollution
control. It adds to the welfare of people, i.e. quality of life of the people.
This means increase in life expectancy and higher literacy rate which will
result in increasing our real GDP. Most importantly, sustainable development
helps in protecting or rather preserving resources for our future generations.
In an increasingly complex world,
where rapid change is a way of life, India is trying hard to achieve high
economic growth. Achieving high growth is neither a new to us nor beyond our
capacity, we have done it before and we will do it again. If that growth were
to come with minimal environment problems and meets the needs of the present
without compromising on the ability of the future to meet their needs, it would
be the real icing on the cake.
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