Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

YOUTH SURVEY 2017

A majority of young people between the ages of 18 and 25 are neither aware of the negative effect of greenhouse gases nor understand how sustainabl­e options such as renewable energy use can save the planet

- Ayesha Banerjee letters@hindustant­imes.com

PART SIX: GOING GREEN

Today’s youth is not hot and bothered about global warming

71%

not aware of renewable energy

74%

don’t know why earth is heating up

In 2015, 4.2 million people are estimated to have died due to air pollution, according to environmen­tal research organisati­on Health Effects Institute. India accounts for one in four of these deaths — 1.09 million — where research shows the youth are largely ignorant about environmen­tal issues. The Hindustan Times-MaRS Monitoring and Research Systems Youth Survey 2017, reveals that more than 74% of people between the ages of 18 and 25 are not aware of how greenhouse gases cause global warming. Renewable energy is a mystery to 70.9% of the respondent­s and 63.4% cannot explain why bio-degradable waste is important.

Sustainabl­e practices are limited to switching off lights at home and avoiding use of “plastic bags as far as possible.” About 68.4% of youngsters cannot identify eco-friendly products. They will be forced to act soon, says Mihir Mathur, a former fellow with the Earth Science and Climate Change Division at The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI). The youth will most likely be left with no choice since the next few decades will see a more pronounced impact of environmen­tal inaction.

“The pollution, the landfills, and the food that shall become more synthetic will force the youth to take steps in order to adapt to the future world that we are creating,” says Mathur, a visiting faculty at Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Hyderabad and the Indian School of Developmen­t Management, Noida.

Ashim Berry, 22, and Sarthak Anand, 25, who work with the NGO Swechha, are surprised at the Youth Survey findings that 80.2% youngsters have not participat­ed in cleanlines­s drives. Both are dedicated to the greening cause , participat­ing in river cleanlines­s campaigns and in literacy drives in slums.

As the environmen­tal education programme coordinato­r with the NGO, 23-year-old Anshika Srivastava wants studies related to sustainabl­e developmen­t and climate change to be built“into the education curriculum.” Children should be taught how waste is segregated, they should understand why the waste problem exists. This has to be done, she says, because our society is consuming more and more.

Mathur feels the youth should build consensus on a future they deeply desire. “What is it that they wish to have, say, in 2040? Do they see a world that is more crowded than today, more polluted than today, more expensive, more poor, more polarised, more synthetic? If they can create a shared vision for themselves, the youth can achieve a lot,” he adds.

Anand,whohas amaster’s indevelopm­ent fromBengal­uru’s Azim Premji University, says his mission is to engage as many children as possible with issues related to environmen­t, hoping they become environmen­t-oriented and consider the effects of their actions on dayto-day life.

As NGOs don’t pay much, campaigner­s like Anand and Berry say they aim to live a simple life. However, “sustaining oneself and an organisati­on is tough,” says Anand.

Berry, a musician who supports himself with the money he makes from gigs, says he won’t have it any other way. A green campaigner sincehissc­hool days, hehas been on YamunaYatr­as,tracingthe river from its source in Yamunotri to the plains in Brindavan. Seeing how “we exploit the river,” has affected him deeply and motivated him to be a change maker to save the planet.

I have been on Yamuna yatras starting from its source, the Yamunotri. Seeing how we have exploited the river has affected me deeply

ASHIM BERRY, NGO worker Children should be taught how waste is segregated, they should understand why the waste problem exists. Our society is consuming more and more

ANSHIKA SRIVASTAVA , NGO worker My mission is to engage as many children as possible with issues related to environmen­t

SARTHAK ANAND, NGO worker

 ??  ?? Greening drive: (From right)Sarthak Anand, Anshika Srivastava and Ashim Berry helping children plant a ‘mini forest’ in a Delhi school
Greening drive: (From right)Sarthak Anand, Anshika Srivastava and Ashim Berry helping children plant a ‘mini forest’ in a Delhi school
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