ECOCIDE- MAN
MADE ECOLOGICAL DISASTERS
“The rules of our world are laws, and they can be changed. Laws can
restrict or they can enable. What matters is what they serve. Many of the laws
in our world serve property - they are based on ownership. But imagine a law
that has a higher moral authority… a law that puts people and planet first.
Imagine a law that starts from first do no harm, that stops this dangerous game
and takes us to a place of safety….” Polly Higgins, 2015
“We need to change the rules.” Greta Thunberg, 2019
Man-made disasters have an element of human
intent, negligence or error involving a failure of a man-made system,
as opposed to natural disasters resulting from natural hazards. Such man-made
disasters are crime, arson, civil disorder, terrorism, war, biological/chemical
threat, cyber attacks etc. Floods, storms, earthquakes, droughts, forest
fires and volcanic eruptions are among the most devastating types of natural
catastrophe. But some disasters are man-made. These include explosions, major
fires, aviation, shipping and railway accidents, and the release of toxic
substances into the environment from industrial establishments. Man-made
pollutants can threaten human health and compromise the natural ecosystem
and environment. Man-made pollution is generally a byproduct of human
actions such as consumption, waste disposal, industrial production,
transportation and energy generation from thermal power plants. When you
picture flooding, the word “natural disaster” probably
comes to mind. However, many floods are anything but natural,
stemming from plumbing systems, appliances, and other man-made inventions.
Our sprawling cities and consumption of fossil fuels also have a direct impact
on the environment. These activities are also causing changes
in global weather patterns, leading to an increase in natural
disasters like floods and wildfires in forest. The term, “technical
disaster” defines the source of a disaster and the term, “environmental
disaster” describes the results of problematic man-made interferences with
the natural environment. Environmental disasters are defined as man-made
damages to the natural environment that result in disease and death of living
beings; including, plants, animals and human beings. Environmental
disasters can result from technical accidents, human, technological or
mechanical failure or carelessness. They can also be the consequence of
long-term environmental pollution, such as, the greenhouse effect or the
destruction of the ozone layer.
The Tragic Effects of Man
Made Disasters
·
Gas Leaks- Gas leaks tend to be some of the most dangerous disasters,
because they seem innocuous until it's too late.
·
Oil Spills- Oil spills are some of the most familiar man-made
disasters, devastating to people, the environment, animals and global socio-economics.
·
Nuclear Meltdown.
·
Industrial Fires and emissions.
·
Illegal mining.
Environmental impacts of illegal mining can
occur at local, regional, and global scales through direct and indirect mining practices.
Impacts can result in erosion, sinkholes, loss of biodiversity, or the
contamination of soil, groundwater, and surface water by the chemicals emitted
from mining processes. Mining disasters can occur either from mining tunnels
collapsing, burying the miners working underneath the earth, or by the spillage
of hazardous chemicals employed for dissolving the minerals to be
extracted. An example is in the mining of gold, during which cyanide is used,
and often carelessly spilled on farming land. The collapse of architecture, buildings, bridges, or
dams can also be followed by destructive consequences; e.g., the breaking
of dams can release enormous amounts of water resulting in devastating
flooding, or spillage of chemicals. Accidents in transportation, whether by
airplane, ship, train or motorized vehicle can have disastrous effects, e.g.,
by the involvement of large numbers of passengers, by spilling huge amounts of
oil or chemicals, or by causing fire, collapse of buildings or blockage of
passage ways. Forest fires in arid areas can also
be caused by human carelessness of e.g., by leaving behind pieces of broken
glass – enough to incite a fire. Most mining activities are extremely high-risk for not only the
environment, but also those who do the actual physical labor. Some of these
impacts have long-term consequences, such as the contamination of soil and
groundwater that can take years to
rectify.
Some
worst man made eco disasters
As environmental calamity appears imminent every time
humans look to widen their grasp over the nature. Let us look at 10 most
notorious man-made environmental disasters — both forgotten and infamous — that
could have been prevented.
Dust Bowl
The market-driven agricultural practices of U.S. farmers —
plowing the virgin topsoil of the Great Plains and monoculture farming — led to
one of the most disastrous ecological events in the nation’s history. Between
1930 and 1940, drought conditions and depleted farmland caused severe dust
storms, some reaching 10,000 feet in the sky and called “Black Blizzards.” An
estimated 2.5 million people were displaced and the catastrophe compounded the
Great Depression, creating what some have called the country’s “most hard time.”
Poison in
Minamata Bay
From 1932 to
1968, the Chisso Corporation of Japan released industrial wastewater with high
levels of mercury into the sea around the city of Minamata. The mercury
poisoned the marine food chain and in turn thousands of residents became ill,
leading to the discovery of a new neurological condition called Chisso-Minamata
Disease. To date, more than 1,700 people have died from the disease, which can
cause convulsions, loss of sight and hearing, paralysis, coma and death.
Ecocide in Vietnam
The Rainbow Herbicides showered
over the jungles of Southeast Asia included Agent Blue, Purple and Pink, but
Orange accounted for more than half of the nearly 20 million gallons of deadly chemicals used by the U.S. military between 1961 and 1971. The
cost to human life was horrifying and the large-scale destruction of the
region’s environment led to the coinage of the word “ecocide.”
Gas leak death in
Bhopal
In what is
considered the world’s worst industrial catastrophe, 32 tons of deadly chemical
gases named methyl isocyanate leaked
into the city of Bhopal, India, on Dec. 3, 1984, and an estimated 9,000 people
died immediately from the invisible, air-born poison. The final death toll over
the ensuing weeks has been estimated at 20,000 and hundreds of thousands of
residents suffered permanent injuries. Today, the Union Carbide plant, the site
of the disaster, remains a toxic waste site contaminating the groundwater in
Bhopal.
Catastrophe at
Chernobyl Nuclear Plant
First there was Windscale in
1957, then Three Mile Island in 1979, but when a nuclear reactor at the
Chernobyl Nuclear Plant in Ukraine had a meltdown in 1986, it became the worst
nuclear power plant disaster in history. The United Nation’s Chernobyl Forum
Report estimated the total number of deaths from cancer caused by the radiation
exposure to be 4,000.
The Exxon Valdez oil
spill crisis
Although it is
the most infamous oil spill in history, the Exxon Valdez catastrophe that
dumped 11 million gallons of oil into the Prince William Sound of Alaska in
1989 is actually far from the largest on record. The Gulf War oil spill in
1991, for example, resulted in at least 160 million gallons of oil entering the
Persian Gulf. Nonetheless, Exxon Valdez heightened public awareness of the great
environmental costs of oil spills and led Congress to pass the Oil Pollution
Act in 1990. Tragically, clean-up efforts such as high-pressure washing of
shorelines that followed Exxon Valdez also had detrimental effects on the once
pristine ecosystem of the sound.
Dying oceans and
sea
When the cod
population crashed in the historically abundant waters off of Newfoundland in
1992, 40,000 people lost their jobs and the effect on the region’s marine
ecosystem was devastating. Today, fishing stocks from Iceland to Chile are
overfished and suffering. The writing on the wall couldn’t be clearer:
The world’s oceans are being
pushed to their ecological limits. And, diminishing populations of fish don’t
just affect the great predators of the seas, they bring the economies and livelihoods of their
human predators down with them.
Perfect storm
over Lake Victoria
Today, the
largest lake in Africa is the center of a perfect storm of environmental
crises: chemical and raw sewage pollution; overfishing; a plague of water
hyacinth plants; exploding algae blooms that suffocate flora and fauna.
Additionally, the lake’s border is shrinking by as much as 150 feet in some
places. Forty million Africans in Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania are dependent on
Lake Victoria for their livelihoods and sustenance making this one of the worst
unfolding environmental disasters.
Rape of the
Amazon
Twenty percent of
the Amazon rainforest has been lost to logging, soy-farming, cattle ranches and
roads in recent decades. The damage to the forest’s biodiversity is inestimable
and the release of large amounts of carbon held in the forest’s flora could be
accelerating global warming. Some experts now believe the way to mitigate
deforestation of the Amazon could be to create better jobs through sustainable
development. "It's no good people saying the Amazon has to be
the sanctuary of humanity and forget that there are 20 million people living
there," said Brazil's President Luiz Lula da Silva.
Our warming
planet
Jellyfish swarms, Melting glaciers, Lakes turned to
desert, and Spreading disease. All are testimony to global warming. The effects of
global warming caused by increased greenhouse gases read like descriptions of
the Great Tribulation in The Bible. The first climate change conference was
held in 1963 and with increasing urgency, scientists have been raising red
flags ever since, warning us that because of unchecked consumption of fossil
fuels, the human species is approaching a critical threshold where we will no
longer be able to influence the warming climate.
India has also seen
its fair share of disasters over the years resulting in significant loss of
lives. While nature’s behaviour is not in human hands, reducing its impact
certainly is. But the bigger concern has been man-made disasters that have been
a result of human carelessness, callousness, or sheer lack of foresight and
planning that has ended up with large number of innocent people losing lives,
all of which were preventable. It is appalling to see that the government seems
to learn nothing from each tragedy and life just seems to move on with little
concern or value for human life. But it’s not government alone that must be
blamed, after all, it’s we the people, that allow the government of the day to
move on with little accountability or punishment to those in power at the
political, bureaucratic or business level. It’s time for accountability. Here
are some worst man-made disasters in India which have caused substantial damage
to the immediate environment.
Bhopal Gas tragedy
Recalling the
night of December 2-3 1984 in Bhopal still sends a shiver down the spine of
those who were there that fateful night when toxic Methyl Isocyanate (MIC) gas
leaked from the factory owned by Union Carbide. The gas silently spread out
engulfing the densely populated areas around the factory.
People woke
up and ran outside desperately gasping for breath only to take in more of the
deadly gas. Many died in their sleep while others went blind. Over time,
several people suffered from post trauma diseases, while many continue to
suffer even today. This was one of the worst chemical disasters globally that
resulted in over 10,000 losing their lives (the actual number remains disputed) and over 5.5 lakh
persons affected and suffering from agonizing injuries. The tragedy was a
result of human error and poor supervision at the factory. Unfortunately,
several industries in India still continue to operate with very little
government pressure on implementation of safety protocols as per Standard
Operating Procedures laid down by the authorities.
Baghjan gas leak
The 2020 Assam gas and oil leak, also referred as the
Baghjan gas leak , is a natural gas blowout that happened in Oil India Limited's Baghjan Oilfield in Tinsukia district, Assam, India on 27 May 2020. The blowout occurred at
Well No. 5 in the Baghjan Oil Field, resulting in a leak of natural gas. The
leaking well subsequently caught fire, and has resulted in two deaths,
large-scale local evacuations, and environmental damage to the nearby Dibru-Saikhowa National Park. The Baghjan Oil Field is located in Tinsukia
District in
the State of Assam, near
Baghjan village, which has a resident population of 4,488 persons. The
nearest towns are Doom
Dooma and Tinsukia. Baghjan Oil Field is located near
the Dibru-Saikhowa National Park in Assam, and is also in
proximity to Maguri Motapung Beel, a natural wetland. Dibru-Saikhowa National Park is the only riverine island
wildlife reserve, globally. It contains a variety of rare and endangered
species, including the Gangetic
Dolphin,
which is endangered, as well as herds of wild horses, tigers, capped
langurs, hoolock
gibbons, slow
loris,
and several rare butterflies and fish. The Dibru-Saikhowa National Park is also connected to Namdapha National Park via the Dehing-Patkai Wildlife
Sanctuary. These regions are part of the Indo-Burma
Biodiversity Hotspot. Baghjan Well No. 5, from which the leak occurred, is
located at a distance of 900 meters from the park and adjoins a buffer forested
region surrounding the park. It is also close to the Indo-Burma Biodiversity
Hotspot.
This disaster
can be attributed to the deliberate environmental authorization policy of the Central
Government which exempted all oil and gas firms conducting exploratory drilling
from legal requirements for environmental clearances. Prior to the leak,
in 2020, the region witnessed protests after the Government of India announced
that they had authorized Oil India Limited to explore the area under Dibru-Saikhowa National Park for hydrocarbons. A
subsequent investigation by Assam's State Pollution Control Board found that
Oil India Limited had begun drilling at the Baghjan Oil Field without obtaining
prior environmental clearances in accordance with legal requirements under the
Water (Prevention of Control of Pollution) Act, 1974, Air (Prevention of
Control of Pollution) Act 1981 and Environment Protection Act 1986. Oil India Limited had also
failed to conduct mandatory public hearings before beginning drilling. The
Eco-Sensitive Zone around Dibru-Saikhowa National Park was reduced in size at the
request of Oil India Limited in order to allow the well to be
established. In 2013, the Baghjan Oil Field was inspected by a team from
the National Board for Wildlife, which criticised the Government
of India for ratifying the breach of wildlife norms after Oil India Corporation
had already begun operating in an eco-sensitive
The 2017 Ennore oil spill
The oil spill occurred on 28 January 2017 when an
outbound empty tanker BW Maple collided with an inbound loaded
oil tanker Dawn Kanchipuram at 04:00 local time. It was
unexpected. The
two ships collided at 4 am on 27 January 2017. In the morning, the Kamarajar
port authority released a press statement that there is no damage to the
environment and no casualty or injury to persons. It also indicated that both
vessels are safely anchored and the extents of damage to the vessels are under
assessment. By afternoon, oil spill sheen was visible with dead turtles
being washed ashore and residents of nearby coastal areas reporting a strong
smell of oil. The Indian Coast Guard confirmed they were assessing the situation and providing
assistance required. The Coast Guard also said that the spill would be
contained in less than 24 hours. Investigation into the cause of the collision
began on 29 January 2017. On 30 January 2017, the Kamarajar Port released
a note claiming that there is no major damage to the environment or injury to
persons and some sheens of oil traces were observed. It also stated that an oil
boom was deployed as a precautionary measure around the vessel Dawn Kanchipuram
to contain seepage if any. The ship was subsequently brought into the port and
berthed it after its cargo was discharged and vehicle inspections for damage
assessment did not yield any evidence of an oil spill barring 'some sheens of
oil traces', the press note said. The fishing community claimed that hundreds
of fish had died and that they were unable to go for fishing because the
spillage had come up to the shore.
The 2010 Mumbai oil spill
This occurred after the Panama-flagged MV MSC Chitra and MV Khalijia 3 collided off the coast of India near Mumbai on Saturday, 7 August 2010. MSC Chitra, which was outbound
from South Mumbai's Nava Sheva port, collided with the inbound Khalijia-III,
which caused about 200 cargo containers from MSC Chitra to be
thrown into the Arabian Sea. Khalijia-III was apparently
involved with another mishap on 18 July 2010. This also shows that better
navigational foresight could have avoided the disaster which caused immense
damage to immediate biosphere.
Bellandur Lake pollution
It is a lake in the suburb of Bellandur in the southeast of the city of Bengaluru and is the largest lake in the city. It was used for landing amphibious aircraft during
British rule .It is a part of Bellandur drainage system that drains the
southern and the south-eastern parts of the city. The lake is a receptor from
three chains of lakes upstream, and has a catchment area of about 148 square
kilometres (37,000 acres). Water from this lake flows further east to the Varthur
Lake, from where it flows down the
plateau and eventually into the Pinakani river basin. It is currently
highly polluted with sewage, and in May 2015 the foam covering the water
surface caught fire and burned for hours. The lake caught fire again in January
2018. Bellandur Lake is a major water body which
is located in one of the three main valleys of Bengaluru. It forms a part of
the Ponnaiyar River catchment, and water from
Bellandur flows to Varthur Lake, ultimately joining the Pennar River.
Currently, most of Bengaluru's treated and untreated sewage is released into
Bellandur Lake, severely polluting it, resulting in a depletion of wildlife in
and around the lake. Residential and commercial activities in the region have
resulted in increasing the silt deposition in the lake and have caused loss of
underground water recharge. The Bellandur Lake was a prominent catchment area
with a good green cover and was a watering hole for the region's numerous,
indigenous wildlife. But 30 years of unplanned urbanization have taken a toll
on the lake, now several species are gone from the area, including kingfishers, parakeets, wood pigeons, kites, cobras, rat snakes, monitor lizards. As more and larger apartment
complexes come up on the lakes shores, more such species will disappear. The problem goes back to 1980s when unplanned growth
broke the chain of tanks and lakes feeding the Bellandur Lake. This reduced the
amount of rain water reaching the lake to recharge it. The development also
resulted in letting in untreated sewage water from housing societies and using
the lake surrounding area to dump solid waste. Even industries from surrounding
areas started dumping their waste into the lake. The combination of all
these factors has led to a decline in the once robust ecosystem of the lake
which now resembles a stinking cesspool. Residents in neighboring areas
complain of an odious stench that rises from the lake as a result of
uninhibited sewage and chemical dumping from nearby industrial units. The
presence of industrial chemicals in the water causes the lake surface to catch
fire regularly. The main source of the problem comes from the fact that the
lake doesn't completely come under any one civic body. The lake is under the
jurisdiction of multiple agencies and civic bodies thus leading to lack of
accountability.
Indian Vulture crisis
Nine
species of vulture can be found living in India, but most
are now in danger of extinction after a
rapid and major population collapse in recent decades. As recently as the
1980s there were up to 80 million white-rumped vultures (Gyps
bengalensis) in India, but today the population numbers only several
thousand. Population of three Gyps vultures in South Asia
decreased by about 95% in the 1990s. A major contributing factor in declining
populations of vultures is believed to be widespread use of drugs such as diclofenac, once
commonly used as a livestock anti-inflammatory drug. Usage of diclofenac is
banned in India. The IUCN Red Data Book has listed Gyps
bengalensis as "critically endangered". In winter 2012, 56
vultures in three species (Eurasian
griffon, cinereous
vulture, Egyptian
vulture)
and 10 steppe eagles were found dead at Jorbeer dumping site. Six Eurasian griffons were found dead in May
2013 due to dehydration and wing weakness. The area has been declared as a
conserved forest area, but the dead animal dumping site is not part of the
protected area. The dramatic vulture decline observed across India presents a
range of ecological threats, by influencing the numbers and distribution of
other scavenging species. Increased feral dog populations have been reported
all over in India, posing many associated disease risks such as rabies to
humans and wildlife. India already accounts for a very high incidence of rabies
cases, and an absolute shortage of quality anti-rabies vaccine in rural areas
can aggravate the problem even further. Similarly, increased crow populations
at carcass sites near settlement areas pose a risk of infections to poultry,
domesticated birds, and humans. Prevalence and concentration of diclofenac
residues in ungulate carcasses is important for India's threatened vulture
populations. A small proportion (< 0.8%) of ungulate carcasses containing
lethal levels of diclofenac is enough to cause the observed rapid decline of
vultures’ population. Vultures previously played an important role in public
sanitation in India and their disappearance has resulted in a number of
problems, and as such numerous conservation schemes are in place to assist in
the recovery of vulture populations.
The sudden
collapse of the natural animal disposal system in India has had multiple
consequences. The carcasses formerly eaten by vultures rot in village fields
leading to contaminated drinking water. The disappearance of vultures has
allowed other species such as rat and feral dog populations
to grow. These newly abundant scavengers are not
as efficient as vultures. A vulture's metabolism is a
true “dead-end” for pathogens, but dogs and rats become carriers of the
pathogens. India has an estimated 18 million feral or stray dogs, the
largest population of carnivores in the world, which has led to increase
in leopards invading
inhabited areas preying on feral dogs leading to conflicts with humans. The
mammals also carry diseases from rotting carcasses such as rabies, anthrax, plague etc.
and are indirectly responsible for thousands of human deaths. Interestingly,
according to Parsi beliefs,
Earth, Fire, and Water are sacred elements, and both cremation and burial are
sacrilegious. For the deceased Parsi to reach heaven, vultures serve as
intermediaries between earth and sky. The dead body is placed on a Tower of
Silence where vultures, by consuming the body, liberate the soul.
Due to the decline in vulture population, Parsis have been obliged to drop
these ancient customs for reasons of hygiene, since now bodies take six months
to disappear.
The Pasarlapudi blowout
This was an oil rig blowout that took
place on 8 January 1995 in Pasarlapudi, near Amalapuram
in the East Godavari district of Andhra Pradesh, India. It was the largest
blowout ever recorded in the history of the India's oil and natural gas
exploration with a fire that engulfed drilling site. The fire continued for 65
days. Initially Neil Adams Fire Fighters (NAF, Houston) was hired to bring fire
under control. After ONGC disagreed with their strategy NAF left and it was
finally brought under control on 15 March 1995 by International Well Control.
The blowout did not cause any casualties, but the drilling rig was destroyed. Damages to the drilling rig were
estimated at Rs 9.2 crore crore as well as about Rs 7 crore of damage to
equipment at the well site area.
The idea of
disaster is usually associated with human suffering caused by natural events:
tsunamis, hurricanes, earthquakes, floods. However, human-created disasters
stemming from war, the conduct of repressive regimes, the use of sanctions, and
economic and social policies represent an equally important dimension of
disaster. These practices have political goals and produce a range of negative
social and economic conditions beyond their stated aims. They cause human
suffering, especially among vulnerable groups, disproportionately women,
children, older people and poor people. However, to oversee and recognize the
misery and sufferings of human race due to deliberate man-made disasters, the
world has devised its own mechanism to hold the concerned entities responsible
for the same and take punitive action as per defined laws through several
internationally recognized organizations like the UNHRC, ICJ etc. But, there
appears to be no credible organization either nationally or internationally
which could speak for the rights of the Earth hold the Man responsible for such
deliberate and willful crimes against the Mother Earth. The concept of “Ecocide” as an international crime originated in the 1970s, after
the use of Agent Orange by
the United States during
the Vietnam War devastated the local people and wildlife. Ecocide is
criminalized human activity that violates the principles of environmental justice, as by substantially damaging or destroying ecosystems or by
harming the health and well-being of a species including humans. Ecocide has not yet been accepted as an internationally
punishable crime by the United
Nations.
.
In 2010, the proposal to amend the Rome Statute to
include an international crime of Ecocide was submitted by Polly Higgins into
the International Law Commission (ILC). The ILC is the UN body ‘mandated to
promote the progressive development of international law and its codification’.
The purpose for creating the offence of Ecocide as the 5th international Crime
Against Peace is to put in place an international law at the very top level.
122 nations (as of 2015) are State Parties to the Rome Statute excluding India.
International Crime (which is codified in the Rome Statute) applies not only to
the signatory States. If and when a person commits a Crime Against Peace, the
International Criminal Court has powers to intervene in certain circumstances,
even if the person or State involved is a non-signatory. The Rome Statute is
one of the most powerful documents in the world, assigning ‘the most serious
crimes of concern to the international community as a whole over and above all
other laws. Crimes that already exist within the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Court under Article 5 of the Rome Statute are known
collectively as Crime Against Peace. They are:
1. The Crime
of Genocide
2. Crimes against Humanity
3. War Crimes
4. The Crime of Aggression
The Crime of Ecocide is sought to be included
by an amendment. The inclusion of Ecocide law as international law prohibits
mass damage and destruction of the Earth and, as defined above, creates a legal
duty of care for all inhabitants that have been or are at risk of being
significantly harmed due to Ecocide. The duty of care applies to prevent,
prohibit and pre-empt both human-caused Ecocide and natural catastrophes. Where
Ecocide occurs as a crime, remedy can be sought through national courts and the
International Criminal Court (ICC) or a similar body. Currently there is no
overriding mandatory duty of care to prohibit, prevent significant hazards or
harm, or to pre-empt by assisting to those who are facing Ecocide. Governments,
business and finance are not legally bound to be accountable for some of the
biggest Ecocides, despite the risk to both humans and nature. By creating a
crime of Ecocide, the enforcement of a global primary duty (to stop activities
that cause significant harm) ensures that all subsequent decisions are made
whereby people and planet are put first. By criminalising Ecocide at an
international level, a global duty of care is created.
Man-made disasters are only a grim
reminder that Earth cannot take more of human waste. If we don’t control our
activities now, our coming generation in years will get to suffer. India is a
still an under developed country which requires a lot of change in its
environment laws and policies. India needs to make a stronger stand and give
out a firm message at global level. Most of our industries still violate
environmental laws and protocols. Our children need to be taught about
sustainability and environment protection. A lot of change has taken place in past
couple of years, like more and more planting of trees, concept of corporate
social responsibility induced amongst companies, installation of garbage bins
at many places, wide awareness programs amongst children and other class of
people. But there are still millions of people unaware about environment impact
and its consequences. A lot has been researched and written in this area.
Change is positive and motivating, but it is not enough. Just becoming part of
international conferences and protocols won’t bring about a change. Things need
to be done at grass root level. “If not so then it will not be soon when
human race becomes their own reason of extinction.” We must act soon
and we must act now.