The legal framework to manage chemical pollution in India and the lesson from the Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)

Sharma Brij Mohan, Bharat Girija K, Tayal Shresth, Nizzetto Luca , Larssen Thorjørn
Science of the Total Environment, Vol 490 : 733-747p.
2014

Indias rapid agro-economic growth has resulted into many environmental issues, especially related to chemical pollution. Environmental management and control of toxic chemicals have gained significant attention from policy makers, researchers, and enterprises in India. The present study reviews the policy and legal and nonregulatory schemes set in place in this country during the last decades to manage chemical risk and compares themwith those in developed nations. India has a large and fragmented body of regulation to control and manage chemical pollution which appears to be ineffective in protecting environment and human health. The example of POPs contamination in India is proposed to support such a theory. Overlapping of jurisdictions and retrospectively approached environmental policy and risk management currently adopted in India are out of date and excluding Indian economy from the process of building and participating into new, environmentally-sustainable market spaces for chemical products. To address these issues, the introduction of a new integrated and scientifically informed regulation and management scheme is recommended. Such scheme should acknowledge the principle of riskmanagement rather than the current one based on risk acceptance. To this end, India should take advantage of the experience of recently introduced chemical management regulation in some developed nations.

Region
Tags
Chemical management
Environment policy
Toxic substances
Persistent Organic Pollutants
POP
Chemical pollution
Environment pollution