Lumbini at
risk
RAM
CHARITRA SAH Kathmandu
Post
Factories continue to be built at
Buddha’s birthplace posing an environmental threat
May 17, 2016- Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord
Buddha, a pilgrimage site for all the people of the world, the
fountain of peace and a Unesco World Heritage Site, is facing a
serious environmental threat due to the proliferation of factories
all around it. This requires the immediate attention of the
government of Nepal, concerned ministries and Lumbini Development
Trust.
In addition to the cement factory which was
established despite the Industrial Promotion Board’s 2009 decision
not to allow any carbon emitting factories within a 15-km radius of
the sacred site, there are 57 manufacturing plants producing
bricks, cement, clinker, steel, noodles, paper and flour registered
in the Lumbini Protected Zone. Among them, 11 cement factories, two
steel factories, one paper mill and one noodles factory have been
identified as being the largest polluters. Increased solid waste
from tourism and noise and air pollution due to the use of
generators by hotels, restaurants and even monasteries also need to
be addressed.
A study conducted by the World Health Organisation
(WHO) showed that the air at the Lumbini World Heritage Site
contained particulate matter amounting to 270 micrograms per cubic
metre (µg/m3) which is 11 times higher than WHO’s permissible
limit. This level of air pollution is extremely dangerous to the
health of living beings and exemplifies the urgency of the problem.
Noise pollution and emission by heavy duty generators are also on
the rise. The noise pollution level has been found to exceed the
Nepal government’s standard of 50 decibels at daytime and 40
decibels at night-time. Solid waste is also increasing at Lumbini.
According to Asian Development Bank estimates, garbage generation
will reach 617 tonnes by 2020 and 1,307 tonnes by 2030 as there is
no scheme to manage it.
Appeals to the government to do something about the
pollution at the Buddha’s birthplace by the Centre for Public
Health Environmental Development (CEPHED) led to a number of
decisions to address pollution issues in 2013, but they were never
implemented. The government of Nepal through its line ministries
such as the Ministry of Population and Environment, Ministry of
Industry and the Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation
has initiated several legislative and institutional frameworks
specifically dedicated to environmental conservation, preservation
and protection of the World Heritage Site. The Lumbini Development
Trust formed by Lumbini Development Trust Act 1985 for the purpose
of restoring Lumbini Garden under the master plan is the key
institutional strength addressing the pollution and development
related issues.
Nepal is party to the Convention Concerning the
Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage 1972 whose
objectives are identification, protection, conservation,
presentation and transmission to future generations of the cultural
and natural heritage beyond national territories. This convention
was accepted by Nepal in 1978. Additionally, the Ministry of
Population and Environment has enacted numerous environmental
quality standards for air, water, noise, emissions and industrial
effluents which need to be effectively implemented and complied
with. Most importantly, the Industrial Promotion Board of the
Ministry of Industry decided in 2009 that no carbon emitting
industries would be allowed to be established within a 15-km radius
of the Lumbini Protected Zone. However, at least three to four
carbon emitting and highly polluting cement factories have been set
up since this decision was made.
Even though numerous such legislative and
institutional frameworks and policies, plans, decisions and
standards are in place, environmental pollution in Lumbini is
continuing and increasing, putting public health, flora, fauna, the
environment and culturally important temples, stupas and
monasteries including the Mayadevi Temple and the 2,000-year-old
Ashoka Pillar under severe threat of degradation. The construction
of a new cement factory named Sri Ram Cement Industry is currently
moving ahead at Bhaishakhadar, Harnaiya VDC despite having been
halted several times. The construction work at the proposed factory
must be stopped immediately to prevent new sources of environmental
pollution from coming up.
Finally, a pledge by the national government and
officials as well as individuals and organisations to protect and
preserve the World Heritage Site of Lumbini through effective
implementation of all the legislative and institutional frameworks
dedicated to its protection would be a real contribution during the
upcoming international Buddhist conference and celebration of the
2,560th Buddha Jayanti in Nepal.