Mumbai, Delhi among world's dirtiest cities
By
IANS
New York: Mumbai and Delhi are among the 25 dirtiest cities in the world while the four Indian metros and Bangalore are among the 20 densest cities, according to the Forbes magazine.
The US business magazine also lists Sukinda in Orissa and Vapi in Gujarat among the 10 most polluted places globally.
While listing Mumbai as the seventh dirtiest, the magazine also cites a recent private sector proposal, Vision Mumbai, which seeks $1 billion government aid for infrastructure, pollution control and economic growth strategy.
Delhi at No.24 fares little better but gets drubbing for the pollution in Yamuna river, which is devoid of marine life and where "garbage and sewage flow freely, creating a rich environment for the growth of water-borne diseases contributing to extremely high rates of infant morbidity."
In neighbouring Bangladesh, Dhaka, with lead-poisoned air and water pollution from pesticide use, gets the dubious distinction of being the second dirtiest city in the world.
The top slot as the dirtiest city in the world is taken by Baku in Azerbaijan, suffering life-threatening levels of air pollution emitted from oil drilling.
The list, now on the magazine's website, is based on Mercer Human Resource Consulting's ranking of over 200 cities worldwide on levels of air pollution, waste management, water potability, hospital services, medical supplies and the presence of infectious diseases. New York was used as the norm.
In an earlier Forbes list of the 20 densest urban areas in the world, Mumbai and Kolkata occupied the top two slots, packing in over 23,000 people per square kilometre.
India and China combine to claim nine of the 20 slots, according to 2007 statistics from citymayors.com.
Chennai is at No.8, Delhi at No.13 and Bangalore at No.19 in the list of densely populated cities. Karachi in Pakistan is at No.3.
Living in a dense place affects quality of living, unless you have loads of money and the place is gentrified like Tokyo and New York, the magazine commented. Dense is, however, a relative term. "A Mumbai native visiting New York is bound to feel like a New Yorker vacationing on a Wyoming dude ranch," it added.
In Forbes' list of 10 most polluted places on earth, two Indian towns figure. In Sukinda, Orissa, large swathes of the area's surface water and drinking water contain very high covalent chromium levels, potentially affecting 2.6 million people, the magazine said.
Sukinda is home to almost all of the country's chromite ore deposits and one of the largest opencast chromite ore mines in the world.
In Vapi, the pollutants are chemicals and heavy metals from industrial estates, potentially affecting over 70,000 people. Mercury in the groundwater here is reported to be 96 times higher than the World health Organisation (WHO) standards.
Local produce can contain up to 60 times more heavy metals, such as copper, chromium, cadmium and zinc than non-contaminated produce in control groups, Forbes reported.
China and Russia contributed another two cities each to the 10 most polluted places list, prepared by the non-profit Blacksmith Institute.
"In some towns, life expectancy approaches medieval rates, and birth defects are the norm, not the exception," according to the institute. "In others, children's asthma rates are measured above 90 percent and mental retardation is endemic."
Forbes added: "Fast-track economic growth and years of unregulated mining and chemical production have laid waste to the homes of millions."
The US business magazine also lists Sukinda in Orissa and Vapi in Gujarat among the 10 most polluted places globally.
While listing Mumbai as the seventh dirtiest, the magazine also cites a recent private sector proposal, Vision Mumbai, which seeks $1 billion government aid for infrastructure, pollution control and economic growth strategy.
Delhi at No.24 fares little better but gets drubbing for the pollution in Yamuna river, which is devoid of marine life and where "garbage and sewage flow freely, creating a rich environment for the growth of water-borne diseases contributing to extremely high rates of infant morbidity."
In neighbouring Bangladesh, Dhaka, with lead-poisoned air and water pollution from pesticide use, gets the dubious distinction of being the second dirtiest city in the world.
The top slot as the dirtiest city in the world is taken by Baku in Azerbaijan, suffering life-threatening levels of air pollution emitted from oil drilling.
The list, now on the magazine's website, is based on Mercer Human Resource Consulting's ranking of over 200 cities worldwide on levels of air pollution, waste management, water potability, hospital services, medical supplies and the presence of infectious diseases. New York was used as the norm.
In an earlier Forbes list of the 20 densest urban areas in the world, Mumbai and Kolkata occupied the top two slots, packing in over 23,000 people per square kilometre.
India and China combine to claim nine of the 20 slots, according to 2007 statistics from citymayors.com.
Chennai is at No.8, Delhi at No.13 and Bangalore at No.19 in the list of densely populated cities. Karachi in Pakistan is at No.3.
Living in a dense place affects quality of living, unless you have loads of money and the place is gentrified like Tokyo and New York, the magazine commented. Dense is, however, a relative term. "A Mumbai native visiting New York is bound to feel like a New Yorker vacationing on a Wyoming dude ranch," it added.
In Forbes' list of 10 most polluted places on earth, two Indian towns figure. In Sukinda, Orissa, large swathes of the area's surface water and drinking water contain very high covalent chromium levels, potentially affecting 2.6 million people, the magazine said.
Sukinda is home to almost all of the country's chromite ore deposits and one of the largest opencast chromite ore mines in the world.
In Vapi, the pollutants are chemicals and heavy metals from industrial estates, potentially affecting over 70,000 people. Mercury in the groundwater here is reported to be 96 times higher than the World health Organisation (WHO) standards.
Local produce can contain up to 60 times more heavy metals, such as copper, chromium, cadmium and zinc than non-contaminated produce in control groups, Forbes reported.
China and Russia contributed another two cities each to the 10 most polluted places list, prepared by the non-profit Blacksmith Institute.
"In some towns, life expectancy approaches medieval rates, and birth defects are the norm, not the exception," according to the institute. "In others, children's asthma rates are measured above 90 percent and mental retardation is endemic."
Forbes added: "Fast-track economic growth and years of unregulated mining and chemical production have laid waste to the homes of millions."
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Posted by: big naturals mature - 12:00 AM Aug 06, ' 08
6: I'm from Canada and lucky to have lived in
cities which are among the cleanest in the
world. We also stayed in many Asian, African,
European and American cities in the world.
Indian cities are among the least maintained
cities of the world. Indian's perception of
cleanliness is very limited and mostly
confined within their boundary of homes.
Leaders at the helm do not try to change
these perception. Rivers, roads, parks , rail
stations, airport are visible example.
Perception of cleanliness can be seen even
any domestic flights of India:we don't keep
it clean even for the next user. T
Posted by: Indrani Samanta - 12:00 AM Mar 09, ' 08
7: I've been living in Singapore for about 4
years. Lived in Mumbai and Hyderabad before.
We Indians need to keep reminding ourselves and our kids that its not just personal or individual goals that matters in lives but also macro or city/country goals. If our generation does not act future generations will blame us like we are blaming our past and present politicians and businesses, etc.
We seriously need to think and actually implement - on an urgent basis - Major de-urbanization, massive small townships living (much far away from big cities in each state). We need to look seriously into Corporate Social Responsibility and impact of Demographic trends that need major decisions by Governments both Union and State Governments. And we will need Citizen Lobby Groups (to initiate, lobby and implement Governmental Action) and Employee Lobby Groups (within each company to stimulate the Board of Directors and top executives to take Corporate Social Responsibility action and make this happen or enable "change for good". We, at Institute of Corporate Professionals are involved in in such initiatives and projects.
We Indians need to keep reminding ourselves and our kids that its not just personal or individual goals that matters in lives but also macro or city/country goals. If our generation does not act future generations will blame us like we are blaming our past and present politicians and businesses, etc.
We seriously need to think and actually implement - on an urgent basis - Major de-urbanization, massive small townships living (much far away from big cities in each state). We need to look seriously into Corporate Social Responsibility and impact of Demographic trends that need major decisions by Governments both Union and State Governments. And we will need Citizen Lobby Groups (to initiate, lobby and implement Governmental Action) and Employee Lobby Groups (within each company to stimulate the Board of Directors and top executives to take Corporate Social Responsibility action and make this happen or enable "change for good". We, at Institute of Corporate Professionals are involved in in such initiatives and projects.
Posted by: Santosh - 12:00 AM Mar 03, ' 08
8: I am from Bangalore and I know several of our
readers are from here also. Could we start a
movement to remedy this situation?
Posted by: Archie D'Souza - 12:00 AM Mar 03, ' 08
9: Is it matter to any Inidan politicians,
Wipro, Infosys or any one of the fellow
sitting in the Ivory tower? They are mor
interested to live in the US and make money
in India. Even God refuses to help India. It
will take another 50 years to clean up the
mess!
Posted by: saty - 12:00 AM Mar 03, ' 08
10: With the amount of permeation happening in
the name of call centre and other IT jobs
from north and dirtiest cities of India,
Bangalore is not very far from taking no. 1
slot soon.
Also beggars and eunuchs are common sight in most of the traffic signals lately. It looks like the incoming junta is bringing excess baggage along with them
Also beggars and eunuchs are common sight in most of the traffic signals lately. It looks like the incoming junta is bringing excess baggage along with them
Posted by: Venu - 12:00 AM Mar 03, ' 08
11: ya bangalore would b named as the dirtiest
city in the world.
Posted by: Kuntal Basu - 12:00 AM Mar 03, ' 08
12: I am surprised that only Mumbai and Delhi
took the top honors of being dirtiest
cities.
Hyderabad and Bangalore are not any better. High levels of garbage strewn around everywhere, overflowing drainage system, open sewers flowing all over the city, people spitting and urinating wherever they want, people smoking in public places, automobiles spewing uncontrolled emission - this is a common sight everywhere in India. Residents of high-rise apartments and posh bungalows dump their garbage in the neighboring vacant sites. This kind of environmental pollution leads breeding of mosquitoes, air and water pollution
The people of India should be ashamed of this. They should "clean up" their act and start living a healthy life.
Hyderabad and Bangalore are not any better. High levels of garbage strewn around everywhere, overflowing drainage system, open sewers flowing all over the city, people spitting and urinating wherever they want, people smoking in public places, automobiles spewing uncontrolled emission - this is a common sight everywhere in India. Residents of high-rise apartments and posh bungalows dump their garbage in the neighboring vacant sites. This kind of environmental pollution leads breeding of mosquitoes, air and water pollution
The people of India should be ashamed of this. They should "clean up" their act and start living a healthy life.
Posted by: Moorthy - 12:00 AM Mar 03, ' 08
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