food chain - wordpress.com
TRANSCRIPT
Environment Shankar IAS
Ecology
1. Ecology - Study of relationship of living organisms with each other and their environment 2. History of Ecology
Charak Sanhita - Polluted air injurious to health
Charak & Sushrut Sanhita - Classification of animals
3. Environment - Sum total of living, non living components; influences and events surrounding an organism (Biotic + Abiotic) 4. Ecosystem - Ecology + Environment 5. Homeostasis - Capacity of self regulation of ecosystem6. Phagotrophs - Other Nourishing; Saprotophs - Decomposers or Osmotrophs 7. Stenothermal animals - Narrow range of temperature 8. Niche - Unique functional role or place of species in ecosystem, Unique for species, Important role in conservation9. Estuaries are more productive than adjacent sea or river
10. Fresh water ecosystem - Lotic (moving water) and Lentic (still water) 11. The ecads/ ecophenes - similar but morphological distinct in response to different environmental conditions.12. Ecotypes - the species having a wide range of distribution which evolve genetically adapted local populations 13. Level of organisation in Ecology
(i) Individual
(ii) Population - Group of individuals of same species
(iii) Community - Active interaction between species. [Major - independent out of adjacent community; Minor - Notcompletely independent]
(iv) Ecosystem - Structural & Functional unit (Environment + Ecology) Ex. Terrestrial & Aquatic
(v) Ecotone - Zone of transition between two ecosystem, Zone of tension
Edge effect - Species greater in ecotone than either community, Edge species - primary species(bird between forestand desert)
(vi) Biome - Part of biosphere
(vii) Biosphere - Atmosphere + Lithosphere + Hydrosphere, Apple skin, Dormant life at high height
Functions of An Ecosystem
1. Energy Flow (Trophic level : unidirectional)
Loss of heat at each level
Plant converts solar energy into protoplasm
Food Chain
(i) Grazing food chain - Begins from green plant (Photosynthesis)
(ii) Detritus food chain - Starts from dead organic matter, linked with grazing
Food Web - All possible transfer of energy
Ecological Pyramids
(i) Pyramid of Numbers - Upward (Grassland) as well downward (Tree, bird, parasite)
(ii) Pyramid of Biomass - Upward as well downward (Tiny phytoplanktons produced rapidly)
(iii) Pyramid of Energy - Always upward, reflects law of thermodynamics (Loss of heat), help to showbiomagnification
Pollutants and trophic level
(i) Bio accumulation - Pollutants enter food chain, build-up of a toxic chemical in the body of a living organism
(ii) Bio magnification - Tendency to concentrate as move from one level to another (long lived, biologically active(DDT not active so wont cause much problem), mobile and soluble in fat)
Biotic Interaction
Mutualism + + Flower & BEE
Commensalism + 0 Cow dung & beetle
Amensalism - 0 Long tree shades small tree
Competition - - Two species on same food
Predation + - Lion kills dear
Parasitism + - Bed bug sucking my blood
(Neutralism : Do not interact & no effect on each other)
2. Bio Geo chemical Cycle
Nutrient Cycles
Perfect Cycle - replaced as far as they used, gaseous
Imperfect cycle - Sedimentary cycle (Reserve in earth crust)
(i) Water Cycle
Evaporation, Transpiration -> Condensation -> Precipitation
(ii) Carbon Cycle
Photosynthesis -> Organic matter -> Food nutrients, Dead organic materials -> Respiration, Biodegradation (Shortterm cycle)
[Deposited organic matter converted to fossils fuels over time (Long term cycle)]
(iii) Nitrogen Cycle
Free nitrogen -> Fixation -> Amino acid -> Death & Excretion as ammonia/ Denitryfying bacteria (Pseudomonas)
Nitrogen need to be converted to nitrites or nitrate
Nitrogen Fixation
(i) Microorganism [Aerobic Azotobactor, Anerobic Clostridium, Symbiotic Rhizobium, Blue green algae Anabaena &Spirulina]
Ammonia can be taken up by some plants [Ammonia to nitrite by nitrosomonus & nitrite to nitrate by Nitrobacctor]
(ii) Industrial process (Fertilizers) [Nitrogen became pollutant, Harmful algal blossoms, acid rain, eutrophication]
(iii) Thunder & Lightning [Ammonia & nitrates]
(iv) Phosphorus cycle
Occurs as mineral in phospate rock & enters in cycle by mining and sedimentation
Main cause of Excessive free floating rooted plant in lakes
(V) Sulphur cycle
Locked in organic (coal, oil, peat) and inorganic deposit (pyrite rock & sulphur rock)
Released by weathering [Mostly sedimentary cycle except SO2 & H2S)], Volcanic erruption, Combution of fossilfuels, decomposition (SO2 back to earth as sulphuric acid)
Taken up by plans and incorporated through a series of metabolic process into suphue bearing amino acid which isincorporated in proteins of autotroph tissue.
Send back to earth by excretion and death
3. Succession
Progressive series of change which leads to establishment of relatively stable climax community
Pioneer species - First plant to colonise area
Succession stages known as seres
Primary Succession - New site colonized by mosses and lichens, soil formation, ecosystem developemnt
Secondary Succession - In which climax community is disturbed (First invaded by grasses which can survive inbaked soil), faster (Well developed soil)
Autogenic Succession - By living inhabitants of community itself
Allogenic Succession - By outside force
Autotrophic Succession - Green plants dominate
Hetrotrophic Succession - Hetrotrophs dominate
[Note : Faster in middle of large continents, seeds belonging to different seres reach much faster]
Terrestrial Ecosystem
1. Tundra (Barren land)
Arctic Tundra : Below polar ice cap and above tree line in Northern hemisphere (In south pole Tundra is small)
Alpine Tundra : All latitude, High altitude, day night variation
Flora Fauna
Long life, thick cuticle, epidermal hair, large body, small tail, small ears (to lower surface area)
Insects have short life cycle
Allen‘s Rule - Mammals from colder climates generally have shorter ears and limbs to minimise heat loss.
2. Forest ecosystem
(i) Coniferous Forest (Boreal or Taiga)
Cold region, High rainfall, long winters and short summer
Evergreen trees
Soil : Thin podozols and rather poor (slow weathering), acidic and mineral deficient (leaching)
(ii) Temperate decidious forest
Moderate climate and broad leaves deciduous forest (Shed leaves in fall (bare in winter) and regain in spring)
Soil is podozolic and fairly deep
(iii) Temperate evergreen forest
Mediterranean type of climate (warm and dry summer and moist winter)
Fire is hazardous factor
Low broad leafed evergreen trees
(iv) Temperate rain forest
High rainfall and heavy fog (Important source of water than rain itself), High biotic diversity
(v) Tropical rain forest
Most diverse and rich
Vertically stratified
Thick soil, high rate of leaching (Hence not suitable for agriculture)
(vi) Tropical Seasonal forest - Monsoon forest
(vii) Subtropical rain forest - Broad leaved, fairly high rainfall and less temperature variation
3. Indian Forest Type (Champion and Seth 16 type classification)
Tropical wet evergreen forest
Western Ghat, A&N and all along North eastern region
Shurb, short trees, Long trees (Remember Patch of Kavaluban)
Tropical Semi evergreen forest
Western Ghat, A&N and eastern Himalayas
Dense wet evergreen + moist deciduous
Tropical moist deciduous forest
Throughput India (Except western and north western region)
Sal, teak, mango, bamboo, rosewood
Littoral and Swamp - A&N and Delta of Ganga, Brahmaputre
Tropical dry deciduous forest - Throughout North (Except north east), sal, bamboo (Also in MP, AP, KN, TN, GJ)
Tropical thorn forest - areas with black soil
Tropical dry evergreen forest - TN, AP, KN, hard leaved trees with fragrant flowers
Sub tropical broad leaved forest - western ghat and eastern Himalayas, fragrant grass, forest fire (Pune Mumbaitrain route)
Sub tropical pine forest - Steep and dry slopes, chir, oak, pine, amala
Sub tropical dry evergreen forest - Prolonged hot and dry season and a cold winter, Shivalik hills
Montane wet temperate forest - Arunachal Pradesh, Kerala in Nilgiri hills
Himalayan moist temperate forest - Western to eastern Himalaya
Himalayan dry temperate forest - Sikkim, Coniferous, Deodar, Oak, Mapple
Sub Alpine forest - Kashmir to Arunachal
Moist Alpine Forest - All along Himalayas, Heavy rainfall
Dry Alpine Scrub - Found about 3000 m
4. Affect of deforestation
Immediate lowering of ground water level
Long term reduction in precipitation
Soil erosion
Note : Fire often necessary to keep away invasion of desert species, also it increases yield
Water conservation system
Zabo - Nagaland
Apatani System - Apatani tribe of Arunachal Pradesh.
Ahar-Pyne:- indigenous to south Bihar.
A khadin, also called a dhora - Western Rajasthan, to harvest surface runoff water for agriculture.
5. Grassland Ecosystem (25-75 cm rainfall)
Semi Arid Zone - Gujarat, Rajsthan, Western UP
Dry Sub Humid - peninsular India (Except Nilgiri)
Moist sub humid zone - ganga plain (ill drained topography)
Humid Montane - Savannah is derived from humid forest on account of shifting cultivation and grazing
6. Indian Desert
(i) Thar
Flora
Depending Directly Upon rain - Ephemeral (short time, root system, flower bearing) and Perennials (perennialunderground stem but shows only during rainy season)
Depending on sub subterranean water - Well developed root system, coating of wax, etc
Fauna - Migration fly way
(ii) Cold desert - Sandy loamy soil [Neutral to slightly alkaline with low organic content]
7. Desertification
Causes (man made) - Over grazing, increased agriculture, development activities, deforestation
India signatory to UN convention to combat desertification
8. Indian State of forest report
Published biannual basis since 1987 by Forest survey of India
The total forest and tree cover is 24.39% of geographical area of the country.
Aquatic Ecosystem
1. Aquatic Organisms
Neuston - Air water interface, eg. beetle on floating plants
Periphyton - remains attached to stem and leaves of rooted plants, eg. sessile algae
Plankton - Found in all aquatic bodies ( except some swift flowing )
Nekton - swimmers (hence large and powerful)
Benthos - in bottom of water mass
Phytoplanktons - Have chlorophyll [Temperature and rate of photosynthesis has inverted U shape curve] [Highestconcentration at high latitude]
Zooplanktons - Transfer of organic matter from producer to secondary consumer
Sea Grass - Marine flowering plant; shallow coastal water; IUCN accorded highest priority for conservation
Sea weeds - macroscopic algae; Indicator species; Used as fodder and fertilizer; SOurce of agar-agar, iodine etc;
Note : Rotting seas weed is source of harmful Hydrogen sulfide a highly toxic gas
Diatoms - autotrophs
Crustaceans - herbivorous animals
Herrings - arnivorous animals
Hypoxia - Dead ZOne
2. The profundal zone - located below the range of effective light penetration (All depth respiration)3. Winterkill - Ice cover hence photosynthesis stop but respiration continues 4. In water Oxygen is 150 times lower than air (Oxygen is lesser in warm water)5. Water temperature are less subject to change so aquatic species less tolerant to global warming6. Natural Eutrophication - nutrient enrichment of lake promote excess growth7. Cultural eutrophication - accelerated eutrophication, manmade, growth of green algae identification, algal boom
(hence less sunlight penetration hence less oxygen and less fish, anaerobic respiration and toxicity)8. In India natural lakes are relatively few [Mostly found in Himalaya]9. Sudarshan in Gujarat is oldest man made lake
10. On site algae is removed by filters and P-absorber11. Oligotrophic - less nutrient, more species than eutrophic, good water quality, good depth12. A riparian buffer - Vegetated area 13. N - testing - technique to find optimum amount of fertilizer required for crop 14. Algal boom when die or eaten release neuro and hepatoxins which can kill aquatic organisms 15. Red tide / HAB - phytoplanktons species boom (not always red) [two reason nutrient enrichment and warm water], may
lead to death of shellfish which can contaminate water [Deplete oxygen when dies]16. Wetlands
Characteristic
Waterlogged soil at least for seven days during growing season
Adopted plant life (Hydrophyte) and Hydric soil (not enough O2 available)
18.4% of India under wetland (70% of them used for paddy production) [Mostly inland]
National Wetland Conservation Programme (NWCP)
1. Implemented in 1985-862. Central government responsible for overall coordination of wetland conservation program at national andinternational level (Provides guidelines, financial and technical assistance to state)3. State government responsible for management of wetlands and implementation of NWCP
Criteria for identification of wetlands of National importance
1. Same as Ramsar Convention2. representative, rare & unique natural or near natural wetland3. Supports V,E,CE or T species4. Supports population of species important for maintaining biodiversity of particular region5. Provides refuge to species in adverse condition6. Supports 20k + birds 7. Supports significant amount of indigenous fish8. Important source of food and water resource, eco tourism, scenic value, educational opportunities, culturalheritage
Montreux Record
1. Register of wetland site of national importance2. Highlights sites where adverse change in ecological character occurred, occurring or likely to occur 3. Site added or removed only with the approval of the contracting parties 4. Chilka lake placed in 1993, Removed in 2002 (Ramsar wetland conservation Award 2000)5. Loktak lake Manipur in 1993 (Hydroelectricity)6. Keoldeo national park Rajsthan in 1990 (Invasive species Paspalum distichum)
17. Estuary Ecosystem
Characteristics
1. Most productive water bodies (High nutrients)2. Very little wave action 3. 60% world's population live in estuaries 4. Natural filter5. Unique aquatic plants and animals such as sea turtles, sea lions, sea catfish, saltworts, eelgrass,cordgrasses, sea grass, sedge and bulrush6. Predators are important to the estuaries because of their end position in most consumer food chain
Indian Estuarine ecosystem
1. Major estuaries occurs in BOB2. Estuaries are location of sea port3. Estuaries on west coast are smaller
18. Mangroves
Characteristics
1. Evergreen land plants2. Require high solar radiation and have ability to absorb fresh water from saline water3. Pneumatophores (blind root)4. Viviparity (Seed germination on tree itself)5. Salt secreting glands
Mangroves profile in India
1. Subdarbans largest single block of tidal holophytic mangroves in the world2. Bhitkarnika second largest in Indian sub continent 3. Sparse in Kerala 4. Gujarat - Kori Creek and Gulf of Kutch 5. Mangroves act as sink for variety of heavy metals
19. Coral reefs
Characteristics
1. Living animals2. Symbiotic relationship with Zooxanthellae algae [Give color, assist corals in nutrients production in returnalgae get adequate light, CO2 and protected environment]3. Hard (build reefs), Soft 4. Coral polyps build reefs (after death leaves calcium carbonate behind)5. Most found in tropical and subtropical water, there are also deep water corals in colder regions (UNEP reportmore cold water reefs than tropical reefs)
6. Largest Coral reef is Rost Reef of Norway 7. Most productive with high biodiversity 8. Refereed as tropical rain forest of ocean 9. Fringing reefs - contiguous with shore (Andamans)10. Patch reefs - Isolated and discontinuous (Palk Bay, Gulf of Mannar, Gulf of Katchh)11. Barriers reefs - Run parallel to shorelines (Nicobar and Lakshdweep)12. Atolls - Circular or Semicircular, Nicobar and Lakshdweep13. Largest biogenic calcium carbonate producer14. Coral reefs are under Schedule 1 of WPA 1972
Coral Bleaching (Zooxanthellae algae or plasma of Zooxanthellae algae decline)
1. Temperature major cause (Corals live with relatively narrow range of temperature)2. Solar radiation3. Subaerial exposure4. Sedimentation5. Fresh water dilution6. Eutrophication could lower resistance to disease7. High xenobiotic concentration8. Pathogens
20. Key initiative to protect marine and coastal environment
Coastal Ocean Monitoring and Prediction system
1. 19912. Assesses the health of coastal water
Land Ocean interaction in the coastal zone
1. 19952. Develop on a scientific basis the integrated management of coastal environment
Integrated Coastal and Marine Area Management
1. 19982. Model plan for Chennai, Goa and Gulf of Kutch being prepared
Environmental Pollution
1. Primary Pollutant - Persist in form which they are added2. Secondary Pollutant - Chemical reaction of primary pollutants 3. Quantitative Pollutant - Pollutants when concentration is reach beyond level4. Qualitative Pollutant - Man made5. Air Pollution
1. Major Air pollutants
2. SmogSmoke + Fog
The Formation of photochemical smogVOC + NOx ------(In the presence of Sunlight)----> Ozone + Fine particles (SMOG)
Ozone damages cholrenchyma
Note : Classical smog is also called as reducing smog
3. Radon naturally emitted by soil (Causes lung cancer)4. Fly Ash Composition - Aluminium Silicate, Silicon dioxide and Calcium Oxide (Oxide rich heavy toxic metal)
Collection - Electrostatic Precipitation
Advantage - Construction, Reclamation of wasteland, Mine filler, Enhanced water holding capacity andincrease yield (can also decrease yield if collected on leaves)
5. Arresters - Used to separate PM from contaminated air6. Scrubbers - Used to clean air for both gases and dust 7. Catalytic converter - Convert nitrogen oxide to nitrogen 8. Government Initiatives to control air pollutionNational Air Quality Monitoring Program
1. CPCB Executing nationwide2. To ascertain compliance of NAAQS3. Understand natural process of cleaning in the atmosphere
4. To undertake preventive and corrective actionsNational Ambient Air Quality Standards
12 pollutants (SO2, NO2, PM10, PM2.5, Ozone, lead, CO, Arsenic, Nickel, Benzene, Ammonia,Benzopyrene)
National Air Quality Index
1. April 2015, 14 cities2. Good, Satisfactory, Moderately polluted, poor, Very poor, Severe 3. 8 pollutants (PM10, PM2.5, NO2, SO2, CO, O3, NH3, Lead)
6. Water Pollution
1. Species like Tubifex (Annelid worm) can survive in highly polluted water2. DO below 8.0 cotaminated, below 4.0 highly polluted 3. Higher BOD indicates lower DO4. COD more reliable method of measuring pollution load5. Water contaminated with cadmium causes Itai Itai disease (Ouch Ouch disease, painful disease of bonesand joints)6. Lead causes bluish line along gum 7. Mercury compound in waste water are converted by bacterial action to toxic methyl mercury (Numbness,deafness, blurring vision) [crippling deformity minamata disease]8. Yokkaichi asthama - Burning of petroleum and crude oil 9. Excess nitrate react with HB to form non functional methaemoglobin [Blue baby syndrome]10. Floride - Teeth decay, hardening of bone, skeletel flurosis11. Chronic exposure to arsenic causes black foot disease 12. Water Hyacinth (Aquatic weed) can purify water 13. Oil spill is treated by Bregoli by product of paper industry
7. WHO recommended sound level should be 30dB below for indoor environment, 8. Real time Ambient noise monitoring network - 2011, Phase 1 - Seven metro, Phase 2 same cities, Phase 3 90 cities9. Radio Active Pollution
1. Proton (Alpha, blocked by piece of paper), Electron (beta, blocked by metal or glass), gamma (Short waveelectromagnetic waves, blocked by thick piece of concrete)2. Non Ionising Radiation - Affect only those which absorbs them, UV3. Ionising Radiation - High penetration power, cause breakage of macro molecule, X rays4. Nuclear arms uses Uranium 235 or Plutonium 239 fir fission and Hydrogen or lithium for fusion5. Half life - Time needed for half of its atom to decay (Longer half time longer pollution)6. No cure available for radiation damage
10. E Waste
11. Mumbai Rank first in E waste generation follower by Delhi
12. Burning of plastic and PVC releases dioxin and furan
13. Dioxin highly carcinogenic passed on through breast milk (Burning of plastic and PVC)14. Incineration plants - Process of burning waste in large furnace at high temperature 15. Pyrolysis - Burning in controlled oxygen 16. Waste Minimization Circle - Small and medium industrial clusters assisted by World bank with ministry of environment
& forest, Project implemented with help of National Productivity Council 17. Warm water contains less oxygen which replace green algae with less desired blue green algae 18. Bio Remediation
Use of micro organism to degrade the environmental contaminants into less toxic form
In Situ
1. Bio Venting - Supply of air and nutrients through wells to contaminated site, simple hydrocarbons 2. Bio Sparging - Injection of air below the water table to increase level of oxygen3. Bio Augmentation - Micro organisms imported
Ex Situ
1. Land farming - Soil excavated and spread over prepared bed, aerobic respiration 2. Bio piles - Used for petroleum hydrocarbons, hybrid of land farming and composting 3. Bio reactors - Engineered containment system 4. Compostig - Microorganism decomposes waste
Phyto remediation - Use of plants to remove contamination
1. Phyto extraction 2. Phyto transformation or phyto degradation 3. phyto stabilisation - Reduce migration and mobility of contaminated soil 4. Rhizofilteration - water remediation technique, used to reduce contamination in natural wetlands5. Mycofilteration - Use of fungi to filter toxic waste6.
Karnal Technology involves growing tree on ridges 1m wide and 50cm high wand disposing of the untreatedsewage in furrows.
Rotating Biological Contactors - fixed-film reactors similar to biofilters in that organisms are attached to supportmedia
Fluidized Bed Reactor employs fixed film principle and makes the treatment process more user-friendly.
19. Acid rain - PH less than 5.6, Wet deposition, Dry Deposition (dust) 20. Categorization of industrial sector - Red, Orrange, green, white based on pollution index21. Lichens - Algae + Fungi (good bio indicator for air pollution) 22. Chemistry of acid rain - Sunlight produces photo oxidant like Ozone -> interact with oxides of sulfur and nitrogen ->
acid 23. Impact of acid rain - Leaching, Nitrate level in soil decrease, Increase in Ammonia, Lichens on affected area,
proliferation of microbial, Increase in partition of methyl mercury24. Lower than normal level of lead can cause mental deficiencies and behavioral problem
Renewable energy 1. Renewable Energy - Solar, Hydel, Biomass, Geothermal, Ocean thermal, Co generation, Fuel cell 2. Solar Energy
Photovoltic Electricity - Photon absorption by negative layer, DC power Solar thermal - Heat, curved mirrors
High Solar Radiation region - Ladakh, Rajsthan, Northern Gujarat, AP, Maharashtra and MP
International Solar Alliance
1. Launched in COP21 Paris2. 121 countries between tropic of cancer and capricon (PM coined the term Surya Putra)3. Secretariate at National institute of Solar energy, Gurgaon
4. IESS 1047 - Calculator to explore potential energy scenario in India
3. International renewable energy agency - Inter governmental organisation with 150 members HQ at Abu Dhabi
4. Wind energy
Germany, USA, Denmark, Spain India has 80% installed capacity Onshore wind farms - less expensive Offshore wind farms - more expensive Doubling radius can quadrupedal energy High altitude, low air pressure, lighter air hence less productive Horizontal axis design Vertical axis design - Slow but high torque, useful for grinding but not electricity Wind energy map by natioanl institute of wind energy Potential : Gujarat > Karataka> Maharashtra > AP Capacity installed : Tamilnadu > Maharshtra > karnataka > Rajsthan Ministry of new and renewable energy nodal ministry for offshore wind energy (Agency NIWE)
5. Hydro power
Impondement - use of reservoir Diversion - a portion of flow through canal Pumped storage - Pump when demand is low Small hydro power - Capacity less than 25 MW, India and China major players
6. Ocean thermal energy - Uses temperature difference at ocean surface and depth to run heat engine7. Wave energy - First project Vizhinjam near Tiruvendram8. Tidal Energy - Hanthal creek in Gulf of Kutch 9. Biomass - Does not add carbon dioxide to atmosphere (Balanced)
10. Producer gas/ Syn gas - Restricted combustion or pyrolysis, [15% hydrocarbon + CO + CO2 + Nitrogen + hydrogen]11. Co generation - Two form of energy from one fuel, one must be heat, low pressure heat going out of turbine can be
used for heating purpose in household 12. Geo thermal energy - Cooler water converted to steam13. Bio diesel -Jatropa, Curcas, Neem, Mahua, Karanj, Simarouba, etc 14. Fuel cell - Chemical energy to DC, Water vapor and heat only by product, 15. REN 21 - Global renewable energy policy multi stake holder network 16. Gases
Natural gas - Methane plus small amount of ethane
Water gas is a synthesis gas - containing carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
Coal gas - hydrogen, methane and carbon monoxide.
LPG - propane and butane. [ ethyl perceptron added to detect leakages]
Shale - natural gas
Environmental Issues 1. Mission butterfly - Nainital, Scientific garbage disposal system 2. ZBNF - AP 3. 4R - refuse, reduce, recycle and reuse 4. In road construction ridge alignment preferred over valley alignment 5. Palm oil is single larget consumed vegetable oil in India (Imported, AP 86% production of total production of India) 6. Indonesia and Malaysia contribute 87% of production of palm oil [China + India 34% import] 7. Orangutans - CE, threatened by increasing need of Palm oil 8. Round table on sustainable oil - 2004, use of sustainable palm oil, 14% palm oil globally verified by RSPO 9. Colony collapse disorder - unexplained rapid loss of bee colony's adult population (worker)
10. Reasons of CCD - Global warming, Varroa mite (Parasite), Malnutrition, Metal pollution, Stress and Habitat loss 11. Neonicotinoids - insecticide, potential danger to pollinator 12. Surface area of birds is more so they absorbs more radiation + Less fluid content so heat up quickly
13. UN has approved GE tree as carbon sink under Kyoto protocol 14. GE first experiment of GE tree in Rubber (Kerala) 15. Dolphin captivity is banned in India 16. Any possession of shark fin that is not attached to body of shark is hunting17. Cost of environmental pollution - Impact of outdoor air pollution highest, second number is of indoor pollution (In terms of
GDP loss)18. Environmental Impact Assessment
Started in Indian in 1976-77
EPA 1986 - Statutory status to EIA
Steps
Screening -> Scoping -> Baseline data collection -> Impact prediction -> Assessment of alternatives, Delineation ofmitigation -> Public hearing -> Environmental management plan -> Decision making -> Monitoring the clearanceCondition
Rapid EIA - Collection of one season data only (Except Monsoon)
Comprehensive EIA - Data from all sources
An Environmental Supplemental Plan (ESP) - is an environmentally beneficial project or activity that is notrequired by law, but that an alleged violator of Environmental Impact Assessment Notification, 2006 agrees to do tobe eligible for environmental clearance
Biodiversity
1. Genetic diversity - Variety of gene within particular species 2. Species Diversity - Variety of living organism on earth 3. Species richness - Number of species found in community or ecosystem 4. Species evenness - Measures proportion of species at a given site 5. Alpha diversity - diversity within a ecosystem 6. Beta diversity - Comparison of diversity between ecosystem, usually measured as change in amount of species
between ecosystem 7. Gamma diversity - Overall diversity for the different ecosystem within a region 8. Ex situ - Conserving biodiversity outside area where they naturally occurs 9. In situ - Conserving animals and plants in their natural habitats (National park)
10. IUCN categories
IUCN red data book first issued in 1966
Pink pages - CE species
Green pages - Recovered species
Indian biodiversity landscape
1. In terms of species richness India ranks seventh in mammals, ninth in birds and fifth in reptiles and tenth in floraldiversity
2. Realm - Subcontinent size area with unifying features of geography flora and fauna [Himalayan region - Palaearcticrealm and rest of Indian Malayan realm]
3. Biomes
(i) Tropical humid forest
(ii) Tropical dry or deciduous forest
(iii) Warm desert and semi desert
(iv) Coniferous forest
(v) Alpine meadows
4. Bio geographic zones
5. Fauna
India rank firs in buffaloes, second in cattle and goats, third in Sheep, fourth in duck, fifth in Chicken and Sixth inCamel
6. Floral biodiversity
Algae - possess chlorophyll
Fungi - absence of chlorophyll (Western ghat maximum)
Bacteria - absence of chlorophyll
Lichens - Symbiotic relation of algae and fungi
Bryophytes - True roots are absent. [Eg. mosses]
Pteridophyte - vascular and dispersed by spores [Eg. Fern]
Gymnosperms - naked seed plants, simple flower no fruit [Cycas, Pinus]
Angiosperms - fruit bearing [Monocot and Dicot] [Carpels have Sigma - Style - Ovary]
7. WPA 1972
Schedule 1 & part 2 of Schedule 2 - absolute protection
Schedule 3 & 4 - less penalty
Schedule 5 - which can be hunted (Vermin) [Only 4 - Mice, Rat, Common crow and flying fox or fruit eating bat]
Schedule 6 - Cultivation, collection, trade, extraction etc of plants listed in schedule 6 is prohibited
IMP Note : section 62 empowers the states to send a list of wild animals to center to declare Vermin, center then bynotification declare animal vermin for specific time [Except schedule 1 and part 11 of schedule H]
Immunization of livestock within a radius of 5 Km from NP or sanctuary has been made compulsory
Flagship Species - Represent environmental cause
Keystone Species -Whose addition or loss from ecosystem leads to major changes [All top predators]
Indicator Species - Presence indicate presence of other species
Foundation Species - Dominant primary producer
Umbrella Species - Whose requirement include those of many other species
Animals
Endangered Critically Endangered Vulnerable
1. Brown antlered deer(Sangai deer) - NE (Loktaklake) and SE Asia2. Chinese Pangolin - EasterHimalaya (Indian is NT)3. Fishing Cat - Indus(keoladeo NP)4. Ganga River Dolphin -Sensitive to Salinity [ChineseDolphin is declared extinct]
1. Brown Beer - NWHimalaya2. Asiatic Cheetah - Iran 3. Malbar Civet - Endemic toWestern Ghat (Civet oil) 4. Pygmy Hog - Smallest &Rarest wild pig (NW Assam) 5. Gharial - Chambal (Freshwater)6. Hawbill Turtle
1. Binturong -India - Sikkim -Bhutan- China 2. Capped Langur - NE 3. Cheetah4. Clouded Leopard -Himalayan foothills 5. Sea cow (Dugong Dugong)- Wide shallow mangroves 6. Four horn Antelope 7. India Gaur/ Bison
5. Golden Langur - Bhutanand Assam 6. Nilgiri Tahar (Himalayan isNT) - Eravikulam NP (Kerala) 7. Hispid Hare - UP/Bihar/WB8. Hoolock Gibbn (Western) -NE 9. Red Panda - Nepal,Bhutan, India 10. Lion Tailed Macaque -Endemic to western Ghat 11. Red Slenderlori - SriLanka 12. Himalayan Musk Deer -NE Himalaya13. Snow Leopard - TransHimalaya 14. Chiru - Hunted forShahtosh (J&K)15. Tiger 16. Green turtle 17. Hog Deer - North and NEIndia 18. Crocodile
7. Bengal Florican 8. Forest Owlet - Endemic toCentral India 9. Siberian cranes - Lastsiting in Keoldeo NP in 2002
8. Hoolock Gibbn (Eastern) -India not found exceptArunachal 9. Indo Pacific Finlersporpoise - Malbar 10. Sun Bear - NE 11. Marbled Cat12. Nilgiri Langur 13. Greater one horn rhino 14. Rusty spotted cat 15. Asia Small clawled offer 16. Sloth Bear - India NepalBhutan (Fat of bear ismedicine)17. Bengal Slow lori 18. Snubfin Dolphin - Chilkalake 19. Swamp deer - CentralIndia20. Urial21. Tricarinate Hill Turtle 22. Indian Soft shell turtle 23. Leather black Turtle 24. Olive Ridly - ExceptMaxico throughout tropicalwater25. Black naked crane 26. Cheer Pheasant 27. Dugong (Sea Cow) -Herbivorous28. Sambar - Thorn forest
Animal biodiversity in India
Critically endangered mammals
Pygmy Hog
Mammal Smallest wild pig Indicator of grassland habitat Found in relatively undirsturbed Terai grassland [Now confined to Manas NP]
Andaman White tooth shrew
Endemic to India Active in night Campabell NP and Galathea river, Andaman
Kondana Rat
Nocturanalconfined to Sinhgad
The large rock cat/ Elvira cat
Nocturnal or burrowing rodent
Tropical dry deciduous forest
Namdapha Flying squirrel
Unique flying squirrel Found only in Namdapha NP, Arunachal
The Malbar Civet
Endemic to India Western ghat Hunted for oil
Sumatran Rhino
Smallest and most endangered [Javan believe to be extinct in India & only small number survive in Java]Once occurred in foothills of Himalaya
Kashmir Stag/Hangul
Sub species of red deerKashmir valley [Dachigam National Park]
Exceptions
Echinads/Spiny ant eaters
Egg lying mammal Egg is carried out in pouch until it hatch
Platypus
Semi acquatic Egg lying mammal Male platypus has venom
Marsupials
Pouched animal Kangaroo Short gestation time Extinct Marsupials - Quagga and The marsupial wolf
Critically endangered birds
The Jerdon's Courser
Nocturnal bird Found only in the northern part of AP [Undisturbed scrub Jungle]Flagship species for threatened Jungle
The forest owlet
Dry Deciduous forest North-Western and North Central Maharashtra and MP
The Bengal Florican
Rare bustard species known for mating dance Grassland [Native to only three countries Combodia, Nepal and India]
Himalayan Quail
Tall grass and scrub Western Himalaya [last sighting 2003]
Pink headed duck
Overgrown still water pools, marshes and swamps North East region [Not recorded in India since 1949]
Sociable Lapwing [Venellus gregarious]
Winter migrant to India Scrub desert
Spoon billed Sandpiper
Require specialized breeding habitat Coastal area
Siberian Crane
Migratory bird Keoldeo NP, Rajasthan
Plant diversity of India
Effect of abiotic factors on plant
High light intensity favor root growth than shoot growth [Increased transpiration]Low light intensity retard growth of flower and fruits When intensity of light is less than minimum plant die because of accumulation of CO2Only red and blue spectrum effective for photosynthesis [Grown in blue light are small and in red light elongated]Frost - Due to increased transpiration plant get killed Snow influences distribution of deodar, fir and spruce Die back - Die from tip to avoid adverse condition [eg. Sal, Red sander]
Insectivorous plant
Rain washed, nutrient poor, wet and acidic soil Drosera or Sundew - Leaf surface; Use for curding milk and dyeing silk Aldrovanda - Free floating, rootless aquatic plant; Two halves of leaf blade Nepenthes - Pitcher plant; Meghalaya; Treat cholera; Useful as eyedrop and to treat urinary truble Utricularia or Bladderworts - Freshwater wetlands; Open the door take the insect inside; Useful against Cough anddressing wounds [Relate to sex]; Pinguicula or Butterworts - Alpine; Entire leaf work as trap, leaf rolling
Invasive Species
Needle Bush - Dry degraded forestBlack wattle - Introduced for afforestation Goat weed Alternanthera paronychioides - Marshy land Prickly Poppy - Winter season Blumea eriantha - Along railway track or raod side Palmyra, Toddy Palm - Cultivated Calotropis/ Madar, Swallo Wort Datura, Mad Plant, Thorn apple Water Hycinth Impatiens, balsam - Moist forest Ipomoea/ The pink morning glory Lantana Camara / Lantana, wild sage - Scrub land Black Mimosa Touch me not, sleeping grass - Brazil 4 O clock plant - Garden Parthenium/Congress grass Prosopis Juliflora - Brazil, degraded forest Townsend grass
Medicinal Plants
Beddomes Cycad / Perita / Kondaitha - Eastern peninsular region; Arthritis Blue Vanda / Autumn ladies tresses orchid Kuth/Kustha/Pooshkarmoola/Uplet - Kashmir& Himachal; Fragrant; Anti-inflammatory drugLaddies slipper Orchid - Anxity/insomnia Red Vanda Sarpgandha - Sub Himalaya; Treatment of Cholera, Sedation, myosis, hypertension, Colic and fever Ceropegia Species Emodi/Indian Podophyllum - Irritant and toxic to skinTree fern Cycads - Regular consumption led to Lytico-Bodig a disease like ParkinsonElephant's foot (Not a disease but plant) - Synthesis of steroid
Note : Sal tree is completely absence in Deccan trap [Replaced by teak]
Protected Area Network
Protected Areas in India
Wild life sanctuary
WPA 1972Declared by state Certain activities are regulated like grazing Created for particular species
National Park
WPA 1972Declared by state Prohibition on activities like grazing also
Note : Central government can also declare NP and wildlife sanctuary under certain conditions
Boundaries of NP & WLS
In case where territorial water is included, consultation with chief hydrographer of Central government No alteration of boundaries except on recommendation made by National board of wildlife Prohibition on activities like grazing alsoState government appoints collector to inquire into rights nature and extent of rights of any person over land
Conservation Reserve
2003 amendment of WPA 1972Owned by state government adjacent to PATirrupadamarathur first conservation reserve
Community Reserve
2003 amendment of WPA 1972Private land or community land [Provided owner agreed] No change in land use pattern except by resolution passed by management committee and approved by stategovernment
Coastal Protected area
Marine NP/LS WPA act 1972Less than 4% areaGulf of Kutch MPA
Global initiative
The Man and Biosphere Reserve
Intergovernmental scientific program Interdisciplinary research and capacity building MAB relies on world network of biosphere reserve
Biosphere reserve
Example of how human and nature can co exist Each BR are PA where people are integral component Generally have non manipulative core area Local development which is culturally, socially and ecologically sustainable India - National biosphere reserve program was initiated in 1986Design - Core -> Buffer -> Transition Core area - Absolutely undisturbed Buffer zone - Limited recreation like tourism, grazing, etc Transition zone - Not delimited one but a zone of co operation Management of BR is responsibility of state government
[Kanchanganga and Agastyamalai are also in list]
World Network of BR
ICC of UNESCO on request of participating country subject to fulfilling criteria Delisting is done on exceptional ground like violation of obligation after consulting concerned government
Biodiversity Hot Spot
Norman Myers Remarkable universe of extraordinary floral and fauna endemicity struggling to survive India - Eastern Himalaya; Indo Burma (Hottest) ; Western Ghat (Hottest) and Sunderland
World Heritage Site
UNESCO (1972)First list published in 197822 May - International day for biodiversity
Conservation Effort
Project Tiger
1973 Centrally sponsored in situ conservation State government shall on recommendation of NTCA notify an area as Tiger reserve No change in boundary of tiger reserve except on recommendation of NTCA and approval of NBWL No state government shall denotify tiger reserve except in public interest on recommendation of NTCA and approval ofNBWL NTCA - 2006 amendment of WPA; [Chairmanship of the Minister for Environment] Estimated tiger population in India around 2200 (2014 census)Karnataka > UK > MP > TN > MH [Gujarat 0]
Project Crocodile
1975Aid of the United Nations Development Fund and Food and Agriculture Organization.
Project Elephant [National Heritage animal]
1992Centrally sponsored scheme in 13 states Elephant corridors - NE . CI > SI > NW Population - Karnataka > Assam > Kerala > TN Reserve - Assam > Kerala > TN Monitoring illegal killing of elephant - CITES, 2003; South Asia; Data collected from all the site on monthly basis [Subregional support office @ Delhi] Hathi Mere Sathi - MoEF & WTI; E-8 countries Campaign Mascot Gaju - Take Gajah to Prajah E8 - India, Botswana, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Tanzania, Republic of Cango and Thailand [E 50:50 Forum - 50state next 50 years]
Vulture
Scavengers Red headed, King, Slender billed and Long billed are CE Egyptian and White backed endangered Diclofenac affects kidney of vulture[Non steroidal anti inflammatory]Diclofenac banned veterinary use but human form is illegally used Neck drooping Meloxicam is an alternative to diclofenac Vulture safety zone of 150 KM Vulture restaurant by Maharashtra & Punjab forest department [Tables reserved only for unique & rare vultures]Asia's first Gyps reintroduction program @ Pinjore, Haryana
One horn rhino
Manas NP as firsr site of translocation [Risk reduction]
Project snow leopard
Endangered species China > Mongolia > India Conservation framework that involve local community
Sea turtle project
In collaboration with UNDP WII implementing body 10 coastal state with special emphasis on Orrisa Satellite telemetry to locate route of Olive Ridley
SAWEN
Regional network not under SAARC but SAARC countries partnership for controlling trans boundary crimes
Captive breeding - Wild species captured then breed and raised in special facilities
IMP Note : Chief wild life warden of state are empowered to permit hunting of problematic animal under WPA [man eatingtiger not goat eating]
Climate Change
Greenhouse gases
Water Vapor - Biggest overall contributor [Concentration strongly related to presence of other GHG ]Carbon Dioxide - CO2 is more soluble in water than O2Methane - Wetland largest source [Agriculture is primary source]Nitrous Oxide [N2O not NO2] - Agriculture [Removed from atmosphere either by bacteria or by UV action]Fluorinated gas - Very high GWP [Destroyed by sunlight in high atmosphere]Black carbon - Strongest absorber of sunlight; 25% global BC from India and China [Short living]Brown Carbon - Wood and agriculture residue Green house has emisson - Energy-73%; Agriculture- 16%; Industrial Processing- 8% and Waste-3%.
Climate Forcing
Factors in climate system that either increase or decrease effect to climate system Positive - Heating Negative - Cooling Natural forcing and man made forcing
Note : As earth is cooler than Sun, emitted energy has infrared nature
Global warming potential
Ocean Acidification
Rate of uptake of CO2 exceeding buffering capacity of ocean Currently pH around 8.0 [Acidification is direction & not literal meaning]Algal blooms collapse increases acidification Reaction
Carbonate ions are essential for calcification. [Carbonate + Calcium ------> Calcium Carbonate]
However acidification increases bicarbonate ion and carbonic acid causing decreases in concentration of carbonateion
Surface water is over saturated with carbonate ion and hence do not dissolve shell of calcifying organism
Deep cold water is undersaturated with carbonate hence dissolves shell [Cold water - More nutrients more Co2]
Acidification causes rise in saturation horizon [Lysocline]
Ozone Depletion
Measured in Dobson Reaction
CFC
CFC -------UV-------> Chlorine atom
O3 + Cl -------------> Chlorine monoxied + Oxygen
Chlorine monoxied + monoxide ----------> Chlorine + Oxygen
Net Reaction - Ozone + Monoxide -------Chlorine as a catalyst----> Oxygen + Oxygen
Nitrogen Oxides
Nitric Oxide[NO] + Ozone -----------> Nitrogen dioxide + Oxygen
Nitrogen dioxide + monoxide ----------> Nitric oxide + Oxygen
Note : N2O @ stratosphere destroyed to yield nitric oxide
Bromine destroys 100 times more ozone than chlorine does Sulphuric acid particles free chlorine from molecular reservoir and converts reactive nitrogen to inert thus preventingchlorine reserve formation Role of Polar stratospheric cloud
Type of PSC
Nacreous Cloud/ Mother of pearl
Second cloud contain nitric acid instead pure water
Third type are same as Nacerous but form at slower rate
Note : PSC act as substrate to free chlorine from reservoir
Why Antarctic is cursed ?
Low temperature -> PSC @ low height -> Ozone depletion -> Decrease in temperature -> Increased formation ofPSC& Stabilization of Vortex
June(Antarctic winter begins) -> Polar vortex -> October (Lowest level of ozone) -> November(Polar vortex breakdown)
Impact of climate change
Rabi crops affected more than Kharif Higher Rainfall - Semi arid region of western IndiaGlacial lake outburst flood DesertificationLower Rainfall - Central India Increased water stress Rising sea level (Goa will hit worst)Worse cyclone to eastern coast [Fani]Impact on biodiversity Climate change and health [Heat wave, contaminated disease, etc]
Mitigation strategy
Carbon sequestration - Carbon capture and storage Ocean sequestration - Injection or direct fertilization Geological sequestration - into deep subsurface rock; Largest potential Hydrodynamic trapping - CO2 stored as gas in low permeable rock Solubility trapping - Dissolve in water or oil Terrestrial sequestration - Soils and vegetationGreen Carbon - Stored on plants and soil of natural ecosystemBlue Carbon - Aquatic or marine carbon sink Blue carbon initiative - Conservation international, IUCN and IOC of UNESCO Carbon Credit - Tradeable certificate representing right to permit [Organization producing less carbon earns certificate] India's MCX - First exchange in India to trade carbon credits Carbon offsetting - Credit for reduction in GHG at another location Carbon tax - More beneficial than cap and trade in terms of predictability and implementation [India will challenge inWTO any carbon tax on Indian import] Geo Engineering - Copy of Volcano, Shoot mirrors in space, seed the sea with iron (Increased photoplankton growth),whiten the cloud with wind powered ship with help of sea water, Artificial leaf, Commercial use of CO2
India and Climate change
India's National Action plan on climate change
National Solar mission
100 GW of Solar power by 2022Establish India as a Solar leader MNRE
The national mission for enhanced energy efficiency
Ministry of power through BEE
National Mission on Sustainable Habitat
Ministry of Housing and urban affairs Energy efficiency in building and shift towards public transport
National Water mission
Ministry of water Integrated water management New regulatory structure to optimize efficiency of existing irrigation system Fulfill coastal water requirement by desalination technologyPromotion of water neutral and water positive technologies
National mission for sustaining the Himalayan ecosystem
DST Traditional knowledge system for community participation in adaption, mitigation and coping mechanism
National mission for green India
MoEFCC Agro forestry and social forestry Restoration of wetlands
National mission for sustainable agriculture
Ministry of agriculture
Capacity building and skill development Weather based crop insurance scheme Laboratory to land
National mission on strategic knowledge for climate change
DST Development of national capacity of modeling of regional impact
National Bio energy mission - MNRE
INDC
19th Session Warsaw Principle of CBDR
Indian network on climate change assessment
MoEFCCTo promote domestic research on climate change Updates GHG inventory for India4*4 Assessment [4 Region (Western Ghat, Himalaya, Coastal India and NE), 4 Sector (Agri, Water, Forest and Humanhealth) assessment ]
National Communication to UNFCC (NatCom)
Funded by GEF through UNDP MoEFCC is implementing and executing agency Creation of reliable and comprehensive database (Accessible on internet)Preparation of inventory of GHG Estimating historical growth of GHG
Integrated Energy Policy
Mass transport Emphasis on energy efficiency in all sector and renewablesAccelerated development of hydropower and nuclear energy
Rural Electrification policy
Promote renewable technology where grid connectivity is not possibleReforming energy market Remove entry barriers and raise competition
Labelling program for appliances
BEEmandatory and voluntary
Energy Conservation Building Code
Developed by BEE, ministry of power Green building Bio climatic architectural practice
Green rating for integrated habitat assessment (GRIHA)
Conceived by TERI and developed by MNRE Help to evaluate greenness of building Reduce energy consumption without sacrificing comfort Reduce air and water pollution
Energy Audit - Made mandatory in large energy consuming unit in nine industrial sector
Indian Solar Loan Program
UNEP
three year program Credit facility in southern India
National initiative for climate resilient agriculture
ICAR Covers crop, livestock and fisheries Strategic research on adoption and mitigation
BSE - GREENEX
gTrade developed in association with BSE Top 20 companies good in terms of carbon emission, free float market, capitalization and turn over
Long term ecological observation - COP 21 of UNFCC
India Organic certification mark - The certification is issued by testing centers accredited by the Agricultural and ProcessedFood Products Export Development Authority (APEDA)
Climate Change Organisation
UNFCC
Result of UNCED Rio Summit 1992195 countries joined to limit Global warming & CCFirst multilateral legal instrument on climate change UNFCCC Secretariat supports all institutions involved in international CC negotiationsLegally binding
Kyoto protocol (COP-3)
Basics
UNFCC Only existing and binding agreement under which developing countries undertake commitment Adopted in 1997 but entered into force in 2005Emission reduction Commitment - Commit Industrialized countries to stabilize GHG emission [Binding]Annex 1 - Developed countries who will reduce GHG Annex 2 - Who wanted to invest in developing countries Annex A - the 6 GHG gasesAnnex B - Targets of Annex-1 Countries Non Annex - Developing Countries Common but differentiated responsibility Simulate sustainable development through technology transfer and investment US non signatory HOT AIR - it is a concern that some countries can easily meet their targets and could then flood market withemission credit
Architecture
Reporting and verification process Flexible market based mechanism Compliance system
Joint Implementation
Annex B country earn emission reduction credit from emission reduction project in another annex b country Technology transfer to host party
Clean Development mechanism
Annex B country implement emission reduction project in developing country Project earns salable certified emission reduction credit First global environmental investment and credit scheme
Emission trading/ Cap and trade
Known as carbon credit Emission allowance as a type of carbon credit
Offset trading/Carbon project/Baseline and credit trading
Earn by investing in carbon project [Which will emit less amount of GHG]
Non Compliance and Penalty
Non compliance by any mechanism - Difference + additional 30% in next year May also be banned from cap and trade program
Note : Carbon tax is not related to Kyoto protocol
Note : carbon budget can be defined as a tolerable quantity of greenhouse gas emissions that can be emitted in totalityover a specified time
Marrakesh Summit [Mukesh=adopted by GEF ]
COP 7, 2001Adaption fund set up National CDM Authority set up under Secretary MoFCC for Host Country Approval to CDM Projects
Bali meet
2007190 members of UN treaty on climate changeIndia China should also have some targets after 2012Adopted road map as a two year process to finalize binding agreementLaunch of adaption fund Decision on technology transfer & reducing emission from deforestation Bali Action plan
Copenhagen Accord [Copen ne diya India ko BASIC pain]
2009COP 15BASIC and US accord Non binding agreement Deep international cut is needed Adopted the Fast Start Finance [ balanced allocation between mitigation and adaptation ]
Cancun Summit (2010)
Basics
All parties agreed to report voluntary mitigation goal Developing countries to produce report every 2 years Green climate fund with equal representation
Mechanism
Technology mechanism
Action on technology Development and TransferImplemented by UNEP led Climate Technology Center Network ( CTCN )
Green climate fund [कोणालाही कानकून न लागू देता फंड गोळा झाला ]
HQ @ S.Korea As a operating entity of financial mechanism of conventionFinance projects in Developing countries World bank to serve as interim trusteeBy whom to administer is to be confirmIndependent secretariat to support operationGoverned by GCF board
Design by transitional Committee
Adaption Fund
Financed from share of proceeds from CDM mechanism ( 2% of CER )Supervised and managed by AF Board [Meet at least twice a year]GEF provided secretariat & world bank as trustee on interim basis
Durban Summit
COP 17GCF Launched Agriculture brought in by developed countries under climate change The Global Climate and Health Alliance - The Alliance is made up of health and development organisations
Doha Outcome (2012)
COP 18Renewal of time frame to 2020 Carry forward role for surplus assigned unit [But restriction on use]
Warsaw outcome (2013)
COP 19 REDD +INDCs to be submitted - Voluntarily in future Ambition gap - the gap that exists between the level of ambition of states in terms of their willingness to take ambitiousclimate action and the degree of action that is in fact necessary to effectively address climate change. Closing the pre 2020 ambition gap
Lima Outcome (2014)
Pledge were made by both developing and developed countries Lima adaption knowledge initiative Lima work program on Gender - Gender sensitivity in climate change policy
Paris conference (COP-21)
2 degrees by 2100 Universal, Legally Binding Require all parties to put forward NDC [Voluntary]Global stock take every 5 year $100 billion by 2020 - annually provided to developing nations2050 Path Platform ISA - India Adaptation of African AgricultureGlobal Alliance for Buildings and Construction (GlobalABC) as a part of Lima Paris action agenda Global Geothermal Alliance [5 times power capacity by 2030 ]Mission Innovation - India [Department of bio Tech]Mobilise your city - Umbrella brand of European development cooperationClimate Vulnerable Forum - LDCs [Founded by Maldives; Ethiopia is current chair]2017- One Planet Summit - 2 yrs of paris
Marrakech climate change conference (COP 22)
Morocco Biennial report on financial support by developed countries Orphan issue Marrakech action plan for Paris agreement Finalise details on Paris Agreement Sub-National units participating [Telangana Chattisgarh (TC without ticket participate)]Talanoa Dialogue was set up - To assess Countries actions on CC; Focus on Pre-2020 action
COP 23 Bonn - Suva Expert Dialogue
COP 24 Katowice
Rules to implement Paris agreement$100 billion a year from 2020Biennial financial contribution reporting for developed countriesDriving Change Together Partnership - Electromobility; India not signed
India's 1st Biennial Report to UNFCC 2016 - CO2 emission in India (Energy- 73% Agri - 16% Industry- 8% Waste- 3%)
Other Mechanism of UNFCC
Special climate change fund - GEF as operating entity (Adaption)
National communication module - Represents information communicated by Annex II parties on provision of financialresources
REDD
Checking deforestation Discussed in the UNFCCC COP since 2005
REDD+
Set up at COP 13 2007 [Completed @ CoP 19 - Warsaw 2013 ] Includes incentives for conservation and sustainable managementNot include Land degradation Livelihood improvement of locals India to get $3 billion for Green India Mission under NAPCC — For REDD+
UN-REDD program
UNEP+UNDP+FAO [REDD isn't too FADE= FAO + DP+EP]UNDP administered
Global Climate Finance Architecture
The GEF
Financial mechanism for UNFCC on interim basis [Article 11 ]Function under COP and accountable to COP Was established in 1991 by World bank in consultation with UNDP and UNEP [ before the 1992 UNCED]Financial mechanism to - UNFCCC; Stockholm Convention; CBD; UNCCD; Minamata Conventio; Supports MontrealProtocol Focal areas : (1) CC (2) Bio-d (3) REDD (4) PO'P (5) Ozone (6) Intl Waters
Strategic climate fund
Administered by World Bank Adaption + MitigationOne of two multidoner trust fund within Climate investment fund
Forest Investment program
Administered by World Bank Mitigation - REDD+
Pilot program for climate resilience
Administered by World Bank Targeted program of SCF
Scaling up renewable energy program for low income countries
Administered by World Bank Targeted program of SCF
Bicarbon Fund - World Bank (REDD)
Transformative Carbon Asset Facility - World Bank
Clean Technology Fund
One of two multidoner trust fund within Climate investment fundadministered by WB
Forest Carbon Partnership Facility - World Bank (REDD)
Partnership for Market rediness - administered by WB
Strategic priority on adaption - GEF
GEF Trust Fund - GEF administered; Longest standing dedicated public climate change fund [One of six area]
Least Developed Countries fund - GEF
Global Climate change Alliance - EU; Povides technical and financial support to targeted developing countries
Global Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy fund
Administered by EUPPP designed to maximise private finance
MDG Achievement Fund
Administered by UNDP Established by Spain & UNDP
Small Grants Program
GEF + UNDP community-led initiativesEstablished 1992 in India, hosted through- Center for Environmental Education (CEE)
Adaption for Smallholder agriculture program - International fund for agricultural development
Amazon Fund - Brazilian development bank
Various Initiatives
IPCC
Established by UNEP & WMOto become member of IPCC- country must be member of UN or WMOIPCC = Scientific Body ; does NOT conduct research
IPCC’S SPECIAL REPORT ON GLOBAL WARMING OF 1.5°C
Already 1o, For safer world, must limit to 1.5Reduce CO2 emissions by 45% by 2030 from 2010 levels and reach net-zero emissions by 2050The pledges made by the countries in the Paris Agreement will take us to 1.5°C between 2032-2050.US, Russia, Saudi, Kuwait refused to welcome report
National GHG Inventories Prog ( NGGIP )
Established by IPCCprovides methods for estimating national inventories of GHGUsed by countries party to UNFCCC to estimate & report removals
Ecological footprint - Measure of human demand on earth ecosystem [World 1.5; India 0.9]
The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity
2007 by Germany and European Commission To draw international attention on global economic benefits of biodiversity
Green digital Finance alliance - UNEP + Ant Financial Services (China’s company)
World Sustainable Development Summit
TERIPartnership for a resilient Planet 2018/19 (India) Energy Transitions Commission Set up in India Could play role model for developing countries to help move torenewableThe history of the SDGs can be traced to 1972 when governments met under the auspices of the United NationsHuman and Environment Conference.
Mangrooves for the future
Coordinated by : IUCN + UNDP 8 Tsunami effected countries Indian Initiative [After 2004 Tsunami]
GHG protocol
World Resource Institute (WRI) on Sustainable Development International accounting tool for govt and business
Background air pollution monitoring network (BAPMon) - Part of Global Atmospheric Watch of WMO
Greenhouse Gas Bulletins - World Meteorological Organisation
50 Reefs Initiative - Bloomberg Philantrophies + Tiffany + Allen Family
Low Carbon Technology Partnerships Initiative - UN-SDSN + IEA + World Business council for SustainableDevelopment
International Smart Grid action - IEA
REN21 - UNEP
Imp Bird and Biodiversity areas - Birdlife International
World Database of Key Biodiversity Areas -BirdLife International & IUCN
Blue Carbon Initiative - IUCN + UNESCO + Conservation International
Climate and Clean Air Coalition - India is not a partner
Climate Neutral Now - Initiative by UNFCC
Earth Hour - WWF
Earth Day - Earth Day Network
Earth Overshoot Day is hosted and calculated by Global Footprint Network. ( independent think tank )
Clean Sea - UNEP; fight against marine plastic pollution
The Geneva Action Agenda - Aims to reduce air pollution deaths by two-thirds by 2030. [First WHO Global Conferenceon Air Pollution and Health 2018]
Some irrelevant terms for intellectual masturbation
Silviculture - Cultivating forest tree Olericulture - Vegetables growing Arboriculture - Study and cultivation of individual trees, shrubs Pomology - Fruits Mull soil - Characterized by large soil animals Mor Soil - Characterized by smaller soil animals Calcifuge - Not tolerate alkaline soil Caliole or Calciphyte - Not tolerate acidic soil Ecotope - the smallest ecologically distinct landscape features in a landscape mapping and classification systemHemotrophs - Obtain energy by oxidation of electron doner Litotrophs - Use of inorganic substance for biosynthesis Bioleaching - Extraction of metals with help of bio organism Carbon footprint - GHG produced
Act, Institution and policies
Environment protection act
Special procedure for handling hazardous substance Authorize central government to issue direction of regulation of any industry
Biological Diversity Act
Recognizes sovereign right of state to Use their own resources Fair and equitable sharing Three tier structure - NBA, SSB, BMC
Forest Right Act, 2006
Community right & Individual rights Right to IP and traditional knowledge Right to protect, regenerate, conserve or manage any community forest resourceNodal agency MoTaOne generation 25 years; Three generation to grant right Maximum limit - 4 Hector NP & WLS included Minor forest produce - All Non timber forest produce of plant origin Government providing diversion of forest land for purpose of school, hospitals, anganwadis, drinking water supply,roads, Communication, Electricity, etcRights are heritable & not transferable registered jointlyGram Sabha competent authority
Plastic Waste management Rule
50 micron Collect back system Extended producer responsibility left to discretion of local bodies Responsibility of generator Registration of shopkeeper Rural area brought into ambit of rule
Bio Medical waste management rule 2016
Phase out chlorinate plastic bags, gloves and blood bags within two years Bar code system for bagPre treatment
National Green tribunals
NGT act 2010
India third country to have full fledged tribunal Mandated to dispose case within six month
National afforestation and Eco Development Board
MoEFCCNot statutory
Compensatory afforestation fund management and planning authority
Order of supreme court 2016 Act created National Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority
Social forestry -
Around agricultural fields, railway lines, canal, road, etcFarm forestry Community forestry Extention forestry Recreational forestry
National Bamboo Mission
Central sector Implemented by horticultural division of Ministry of Agriculture Promote R&D
Comprehensive Environmental Pollution Index
CPCBCharacterise quality of the environment
Lightning a billion Lives
TERI Use of solar lanterns Facilitated spread of mobile telephone
The India GHG Program
Led by WRI India, Confederation of India Industry (CII) and TERI Industry-led voluntary framework to measure and manage greenhouse gas emissions.
Eco Mark
Labels environmental friendly product BIS [national Standards Body under Ministry of consumer affairs]
India Energy Efficiency Scale-Up Program
Implemented by the Energy Efficiency Services Limited (EESL)Help scale-up the deployment of energy saving measures in residential and public sector
Urban Services Environmental Rating System
Funded by UNDP Executed by MoEFCC & implemrnted by TERI Performance measure tool
National Clean Energy Fund
Using clean energy cessUnder Public account
Animal Welfare board of India
Statutory advisory body Cruelty of animals act 1960Rukmini Devi Arndale
Central Zoo Authority
Wild life protection act, 1991
Maintenance of stud-books of endangered species of wild animals bred in captivity
National biodiversity authority
MoEFCCChennaiBiological diversity act, 2002Impose benefit sharing condition Ensure protection of knowledge of local people Act also provide state biodiversity board & BMC
Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights (PPVFR) Act 2001
Ratified the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of the Intellectual Property RightRight to Seed - right to save, use, exchange or sell seed [But not in branded package]Right to Register VarietiesNational Gene Fund - through which the conservation of varieties developed can be done, recognized and rewarded.Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Authority - Any person, firm, governmental organization or NGOcan submit claim to benefit sharing. Chairperson +15 members. Right to Information and Compensation for Crop Failure Curb on Undisclosed use of Traditional Varieties - claims can be filed by any individual, government organization orNGO on behalf of farmers.
Wildlife crime control bureau - WPA 1972
National Lake Conservation plan - MoEFCC and not Water
National Ganga river basin authority - Under EPA; Chaired by PM
National wasteland development board - Set up under Under MoFCC but transferred to ministry of rural development (Notstatutory)
Bioassay - Organism used to detect presence of physical or chemical factor
International Convention
United nations conference of environment and development (1992)
UNCED ( 1992 ) :
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Earth Summit resulted in :
UN Conference on Environment & Development
Rio Summit / Earth Summit
3 legally binding agreements 1. UNFCCC - Climate Change
2. CBD - Biodiversity
3. UNCCD
3 Documents 1. Rio Declaration
2. Agenda 21
3. Forest Principles
Rio Declaration : Document (27 principles) to guide future Sustainable Development aroundworld
Agenda 21 : Action Plan of UN, for "Sustainable Development”
to be taken at Global—National—Local level, by UN organizationsGovernment & major groups
non-binding, voluntarily
( 21 ~ 21st century )
Local Agenda 21 (LA 21) : National Governments ordering Local bodies to implement plan Locally
Agenda 21 for Culture : ( 2002) Document for “Cultural Development” at all levels
Rio+5 : 1997 UNGA checked progress of Agenda 21 after 5 years
In 1997
Johannesburg Summit : (2002) (R+10) Affirmed UN commitment to fully implementing Agenda 21 + MDG
At the World Summit on Sustainable Development 2002
Rio+20 : 2012 World leaders + Private-Sector + NGOs —>
How to build “green economy” to achieve Sustainable Development
How to improve international cooperation
Created UN Environment Assembly
( > 500 bn pledged )
UN Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD)
CBD : UNCBD
Convention on Bio-diversity
Legally Binding Convention
Every 2 years
Objective :
1. Conserve Bio-iversityd by involving locals
2. Sustainable use of Bio-diversity
3. Equitable Sharing / access to Genetic Resources
Cartegena Protocol on Biosafety :
The protocol to convention on Bio-diversity (CBD)
Additional agreement to CBD
Bio-Safety : Protect everyone from adverse effects of Modern Bio-Technology
Bio-safety Clearing House (BCH) - Central system where every country hasto give information regarding Advance information agreement procedure andLMO intended for direct use as food or feed or for processing
Regulate Import and Export of LMOs
Objective : Living Modified Organism ( LMO ) :
Advanced Informed Agreement (AIA): Set of procedures for export of LMOsfor direct intro into environment (e.g. GM Crops)
Food Feed Processing ( FFP): Procedure for direct use as food / feed /processing
Nagoya-Kuala LumpurSupplementary Protocol :
Backs up Cartagena Protocol
Liability & Redress mechanism in case of damage due introducing/eatingLMO
Nagoya Protocol :
ABS of Genetic Resources : ( Access and equitable benefit sharing )
Giving access to genetic resources and equitable sharing of benefits arisingout of its use
Implementing the equitable sharing part
Greater legal certainty for both
Provider of access
User of genetic resources
Obligations of the contracting party
Access Obligations
Benefit-Sharing Obligations : fair & equitable; monetary(royalties) or nonmonetary
Compliance Obligations : domestic legislation /regulatory ; innovation ofNagoya
Traditional Knowledge : that permission of local communities needs to betaken for access
AICHI Bio-d Targets :
COP10 : 2010
Strategic Goals ABCDE for 2020:
1. A : Mainstreaming bio-diversity across Government & Society (make peopleaware)
2. B : Reduce direct pressure on Bio-diversity
1. Corals, Overfishing
2. Sustainable agriculture
3. Pollution from Fertilizers under control
4. Invasive alien species eradicated
C : Safeguarding eco-systems, species, & genetic diversity (preventingextinction)
D : Benefits to ALL from Bio-d (from essential services)
E : Participatory planning, knowledge man-g & capacity building
Hyderabad Pledge
COP 11 : 2012
India presided in CBD in Hyderabad, 2012
Outcome of COP : doubling International financial flows for Bio-diversity todevelopment countries - $30 bl
India committed $ 50 mil for strengthening institutional mechanism for Bio-diversity conservation
GOI
Nat. Biodiversity act 2002
National Biodiversity Authority (NBA)- For foreigners, NRI
State Biodiversity board: permission to Indians
BMC(Biodiversity Management Company) at local level
Conservation, Fair & Equitable sharing
People’s Biodiversity Register
National and State Biodiversity Funds
Biodiversity Heritage Sites
Ameenpur Lake -Hyderabad - 1st
Sharm El-Sheikh , 2018
COP 14, Egypt
Sharm El-Sheikh declaration on CBD [INVESTING IN BIODIVERSITY FOR PEOPLEAND PLANET]
Ramsar Convention onWetlands: 19975
Inter-government Treaty not affiliated with UN ;
Only Treaty to deal with particular eco-system
Ramsar Sites : Ramsar - Iranian City
Each contracting party gives atleast 1 site - Ramsar List
Trans-boundary Ramsar Sites : Wetlands on national boundaries cooperatively managed by both countries ;
NOT legal status in Ramsar List
Montreux Record :
Ramsar Sites viz undergoing changes due to Pollution / HumanInterference
Keoladeo NP, Rajasthan
Loktak Lake, Manipur
Chilika Lake Orissa (now removed)
International Orgnisation Partners ( IOPs ):
6 Global NGOs associations with Ramsar Convention
Wetlands International - the only global NGO for wetlands
International Water Management Institute
BirdLife International - ( Calimere Bird Sanctuary )
WWF
IUCN
Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust ( WWT)
Changwon Declaration : Human well-being & Wetlands
GOI efforts
Wetlands (Conservation andManagement) Rules, 2017
Empowered states to notify wetlands within their jurisdictions & keep awatch on prohibited activities
'wise use principle"
Center- Review management of Ramsar wetlands
“Wetlands complexes" means two or more ecologically andhydrologically contiguous wetlands
RAMSAR Site in India
Largest wetland of country is- Vembanad
Smallest wetland- Renuka
Sunderban- recently added
Pulikat lake is NOT Ramsa
J&K- Maximum Ramsar sites
Kanjli Wetland, a man-made Wetland in Punjab across the perennial Bien River, a tributary of the Beas River
States not having Ramsar
MH, KN, Goa, Chattisgarh, UK, Bihar, Jharkhand, Arunachal, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram
CITES :
Convention on International Trade inEndangered Species of Flora and Fauna
1975
--> Brainchild of IUCN
—> Legally binding on its members
—>Administered by UNEP (Environment program) (Geneva,Switzerland) ;
Every 3 years
Washington convention
Aim : Not in-situ conservation
Only treaty to ensure that international tradedoes not threaten the existence of the floraand fauna
—>To ensure Unregulated International Trade in Plants & Animals doesthreatens their survival
—>So to control the intl trade 3 lists made -
Appendix 1 : Threatened with extinction (1) Gorillas (2) Sea Turtles(3) Lady Slipper Orchids (4) Giant Pandas
Appendix 2 : May become threaten if unregulated trade continues
Appendix 3 : Range countries asked for help : (1) Turtles (2)Walruses (3) Cape Stage
(1) TRAFFIC : 1976
HQ - UK
Traffic me WWF & (iu)CN donho NGOy karo
The Wildlife Trade Monitoring Network - NGO
Sustainable trade of wild animals and plants
Made up by 2 NGOs —> Joint prog of WWF & IUCN
Supports CITES
World’s largest trade monitoring program
(2) CAWT : 2005 Coalition against Wildlife Trafficking
Leveraging combined strength of Governments + NGO
Raise awareness and political will against wildlife trading
not directly involved in any enforcement activities
(3) CMS :
Bonn Convention
Convention on Conservation of Migratory Species :
Conserve land+aquatic+aerial migratory species throughout theirrange
Inter-Govt treaty under UNEP (117 parties) ; cooperates with otherinternational orgnization NGOs
Appendix 1 : Migratory threatened with extinction
Appendix 2 : Migratory species that would benefit immensely fromconservation’s
Agreements can be legally binding or MoUs between nations
13th COP of CMS - 2020 -Gandhinagar in Gujarat.
Great Indian Bustard (GIB) will be its mascot
International Consortium on CombatingWildlife Crime (ICCWC)
(no traffic in consortium)
CITES
INTERPOL
WCO
WB
UN office on Drugs & Crime
ITTO : 1986 International Tropical Timber Organsiation
Inter-governmental org under UN for Sustainable Managmentof Tropical forest resource
Trade and industry along with conservation
Develops internationally agreed policy documents— sustainableuse of forests
UN Forum for Forests ( UNFF ) : Established by Eco Social Council of UN : ECOSOC
All types of Forests
Objective is (1) Based on Forest Principles (Chapter 11 of Agenda21) (2) outcome of IPF / IFF
Universal membership = All member State of UN + specializedAgencies
Inter-governmental (Panel / Forum) on Forest ( IPF + IFF ): represent 5 years of Intl forest policy dialogue (1995-2000)
Objectives
Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) - Reverse the losses offorest cover worldwide
Enhance forest based economic, social and environmental benefits- also livelihood of tribal
Mobilise funds
Increase the area of SFM
Non-Legally Binding Instrument on All type of Forests (NLBI) :
2007 : 1st time Member States have agreed to intl instrument forSustainable Forest Management
IUCN : 1948
International Union for Conservation of Natureand Natural Resources
Not NGO
Valuing and conserving nature.
Promoting and supporting effective and equitable governance of natural resources
Deploying Nature Based Solutions to address societal challenges including climate change, food security and economic and social development.
HQ in Gland, Switzerland
Includes both 200+States & 600+NGOs - NOT NGO
Observer status in UN
Neutral forum for states, NGOs, UN agencies, scientists andbusinesses to find practical solutions to conservation anddevelopment
Now focus also on Gender equality
"World Conservation Strategy"
"Global Partnership on Forest Landscape Restoration" (GPFLR )
part of Bonn challenge [global effort to bring 150 million hectares ofthe world’s deforested and degraded land into restoration by 2020]
pak- billion trees
Global Tiger Forum ( GTF ) : Only inter-governmental & intermational body campaigning to savetiger worldwide
Secretariat in Delhi and meet once every 3 years
Global Tiger Initiative (GTI) :
Alliance of Governments + International Agencies + Civil Society +Private societies to save wild tigers from extinction
Curtail demand for international trade of tiger parts
Scientifically manage the ecosystems of tigers
World conservation monitoring center (WCMC) UNEP - WCMC
Hazardous Material
Stockholm Convention on POPs : 2001
2-2 o’s — PoP
Legally Binding
Eliminate or restrict the use of Persistent Organic Pollutant ( POPs ) : Carbon-based chemical substances
Legally Binding
PoP -
Not soluble in water
But accumulate in fatty tissues — Bio accumulation
Long life time - toxic to humans and plants
India has ratified
Types
Endosulfan ( pesticide sprayed on Cashew nuts causing male infertility ), DDT
3 categories of POPs :
Annex A : Pesticides - DDT, endosulfan ;
Annex B : Industrial chemicals;
Annex C : By products
Annex D: criteria to include
Basel Convention : 1989
Not legally Binding - (as it cannot beclearly defined)
Control of Trans-boundary movement of Hazardous Waste and theirdisposal
Medical waste
Lead acid batteries
POPs
Chemical Waste by Industries
e-waste
Does not include Radioactive wastes
Specifically for movement of hazardous from Developed to LDCs
India is a signatory
Rotterdam Convention : 1998
Permission before opening dams fromlower riparian states
Legally Binding
Prior Informed Consent ( PIC ) procedure banned/restricted Pesticides &Industrial Chemicals in International Trade
Exporting country provides info to importing countries
India is a signatory
Land
UNCCD : 1994 Convention to Combat Desertification
Sole legally binding intl agreement linking (Environment & Development) to(Sustainable Land Management)
DLDD : Desertification, Land Degradation & Drought
Bottom up approach - encouraging people participation
Committee on S&T
2019- Delhi
Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) by 2030
"Global Land Outlook"
Marine Environment
International Whaling Commission : 1946 International body —> Conservation of whaling Stocks —>orderly development of Whaling Industry
Designate areas as whale sanctuaries
Keeping whale catch under limits
Does NOT define the term "whale"
Currently complete ban on commercial purpose; for R&D allowed
Promote recovery of depleted whale populations
USA acts as Depository nation
India is signatory
London convention : 1972 Marine pollution by dumping waste
Atmosphere : Ozone
Vienna Convention : 1985 First conference for depletion of Ozone
Protect Ozone Layer ; not legally binding because Montreal protocol is
Most widely ratified treaty in UN history ( 197 )
Multilateral Fund - 1990
First ever fund created under an international treaty to help developingcountries
Montreal Protocol-1987:
Protect Ozone layer;
Legally binding;
REDUCE emissions - more leeway to developing countries
CFCs and HCFCs (hydro chlorofluorocarbons )
2009- Universal ratification
UNEP implementing agency [Ozone Action initiative]
Helsinki Conference - 1989
Revise Montreal Protocol
Agreed on TOTAL BAN of Chemicals causing ozone depletion
Kigali Agreement -2016
HFCs also added to the list
Upholds the principle of CBDR
Legally Binding
Penalise for non-compliance
Freeze production by
Developed Countries - 2018
China and other developing - 2024
India and LDCs - 2028
Enter into force 1 January 2019. ..!!!
Saving the Ozone Layer Conference1989
Organised by : UNEP + British Government
Stressed upon withdrawal of Ozone depletion substances
UNFCCC
Kyoto Protocol
Green digital Finance alliance UNEP + Ant Corporation (China)
Bio-D finance initiative (BIOFIN) UNDP +EU + Germany + Switzerland
India - NBA -- implemting authority
Globally Important AgriculturalHeritage Systems :
UNFAO
To safeguard the eco-friendly traditional practices and their associated
Traditional Agri System , Koraput, Odisha
Below Sea Level Farming System, Kuttanad Kerala - Global warming - rise insea levels - so useful!!
Saffron Cultivation, J&K
Helsinki Rules Use of waters of international rivers
National Mission on Bioeconomy Mo S&Tech ( not MoEFCC)
DBT
Boost rural economy by use of bio resources
Global conference on AIR pollutionand Health
Geneva, 2018
WHO
1st global conference on Air pollution & Health
In collaboration with UNEP, WMO, UNFCC, CCAC, UNECE
Target- Reduce deaths by 2/3rd by 2030 as mandated by WHO Assembly
Geneva Declaration
Other Conventions
Bonn challenge IUCN & Germany
-pvtg
bring 150 million hectares of degraded and deforested land into restoration by 2020 and350 million by 2030.
-Pak- Billion Tree Tsunami
Capetown Convention 2018 Efficient financing of high value mobile equipment like Airframes, Helicopter
Mo Civil Aviation released draft bill
Hague Convention International child abduction by parents
Colombo Declaration Drug trafficking in Indian ocean
(Lanka me drugs)
Delhi Dialogue India + ASEAN
Delhi Declaration IORA- Renewable energy in IOR
Astana Declaration Primary Health Care
UNICEF + WHO
in furtherance of Alma-Ata Declaration 197
Brasilia Declaration to reduce the deaths caused due to traffc accidents.
Ratta Maro Zindabad Section
Wildlife Sanctuaries in India
Andaman and Nicobar Islands Great Nicobar
Andhra Pradesh 1. Nagarjuna Sagar Srisailam[Tiger reserve]
2. Eturnagaram
3. Kolleru
4. Pulicat
5. Coringa Wildlife
Arunachal Pradesh Pakui-bameri
Kameng [Elephant]
Assam Garampani
Chirang Ripu [Elephant]
Nameri Tiger Reserve (NTR)
Bihar Gautam Buddha (Gaya)
Vikramshila Gangetic DolphinSanctuary
Himachal Pradesh 1. Gobind Sagar
2. Shikari Devi (Mandi)
Jharkhand 1. Palamau [Tiger reserve]
2. Hazaribagh
3.Betal national park [Tiger reserve]
Karnataka 1. Bhadra [Tiger reserve]
2. Dandeli [Tiger reserve]
3. Ranganathittu
4. Rayala and Nilambur [Elephant]
Kerala 1. Waynad
2. Nayyar
3. Annamudo [Remeber Annamalai inTN]
4. Agastyamalai region
Madhya Pradesh 1. Bori-Satpura
2. Pachmarhi
3. National Chambal
Goa Bhagwan Mahaveer
Maharashtra 1. Kanheri
2. Melghat [Tiger reserve]
3. Tipeshwar (pandharkawada)
4. Nawegaon Nagzira [Tigerreserve]
5. Bor [Tiger reserve]
Mizoram Dampa [Tiger reserve]
Odisha 1. Satkasia
2. Nandan Kanan (Bhubaneshwar)
3. Chandka
4. Chilika Lake
5.Debrigarh [mahanadi river]
Punjab Abohar (Black buck)
Rajasthan 1. Mount Abu
2. Tal Chhappar
Tamil Nadu 1. Vedanthangal
2. Point Calimere
3. Mundanthurai
Uttar Pradesh Chandraprabha (Varanasi)
West Bengal 1. Mahanadi
2. Joldapara
3. Sajanakhali
National Parks and Tiger reserves [Blue are Tiger reserve and are most important]
Andaman and Nicobarlslands
1. Campbell
2. Galathea
3. Mahatma Gandhi Marine
4. Middle Button Island
5. Mount Harriet
6. North Button Island
7. Rani Jhansi Marine
8. Saddle Peak
9. South Button Island
Andhra Pradesh
1. Kasu Brahmananda Reddy
2. Mahaveer Harina Vanasthal
3. Mrugavani
4. Sri Venkataeswara
Arunachal Pradesh 1. Mouling
2. Namdapha [Apart from this Pakke andKamlang]
Assam 1. Dibru-Saikhowa
2. Kaziranga
3. Manas
4. Nameri
5. Orang
Bihar Valmikinagar
Chhattisgarh 1. Indravati [ Apart from this Udanti Sitandiand Achanak Mar]
2. Kangerghati
3. Sanjay
Goa Mollen
Gujarat 1. Bansda
2. Gir
3. Marine (Gulf of Kachchh)
4. Blackbuck
Haryana Sultanpur
Himachal Pradesh 1. Great Himalayan
2. Pin Valley
Jammu and Kashmir 1. City Forest (Salim Ali)
2. Dachigam
3. Hemis
4. Kistwar
Jharkhand Betla
Karnataka 1. Anshi
2. Bandipur
3. Bannerghatta
4. Kudremukh
5. Nagarahole [Apart from this BilgitiRanganatha Temple]
6. Anshi National Park
Kerala 1. Eravikulam
2. Periyar [Apart from this Parambikulam]
3. Silent Valley
Madhya Pradesh 1. Bandhavagarh
2. Fossil
3. Kanha
4. Madhav
5. Panna
6. Pench (Priyadarshini)
7. Sanjay Dubri
8. Satpur
9. Van Vihar
Manipur Keibul-Lamjao
Maharashtra 1. Gugamal
2. Nawegaon
3. Pench
4. Sanjay Gandhi (Borivilli)
5. Tadoba
Meghalaya 1. Balphakram
2. Nokrek Ridge
Mizoram 1. Murlen
2. Phawngpui Blue Mountain
Nagaland Intanki
Odisha 1. Bhitarkanika [Delta of Brahmini andBaitairani]
2. Similipal
Rajasthan 1. Desert
2. Keoladeo Ghana
3. Ranthambore
4. Sariska
Sikkim Khangchendzonga (Kanchenjunga)
Tamil Nadu 1. Guindy
2. Gulf of Mannar Marine
3. Indira Gandhi (Annamalai)
4. Mudumalai
5. Mukurthi
Uttarakhand 1. Corbett
2. Gangotri
3. Gobind
4. Nanda Devi
5. Rajaji
6. Valley of Flowers (Phoolon ki Ghati)
Uttar Pradesh Dudhwa
West Bengal 1. Buxa
2. Gorumara
3. Neora Valley
4. Singhlila
5. Sunderbans
Gumti Wildlife Sanctuary - Tripura.