India, Colombia and Nigeria have the most cases of conflict caused by climate change and environmental disputes, according to a map of global ecological conflict.
More photos after the cut.
The Environmental Justice Atlas, released in Current Science last month, shows that more than 200 conflicts in India are caused by ecological disputes and scarcities of basic resources such as water and forests (see map). Colombia has 101 and Nigeria has 71 environmental conflicts, the researchers say.
The atlas is a work in progress and aims to map 2,500 environmental conflicts and injustices by the end of 2017,
According to V. V. Krishna, EJOLT project director and professor at the
Centre for Studies in Science Policy at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New
Delhi, one reason for India recording the maximum number of conflicts
is the thrust on industrialisation, mining for natural resources and
industrial units exploiting loopholes in environmental governance.
Conflicts related to water management appear highest in India with 59
cases, followed by conflicts in fossil fuels and climate justice
category with 47 cases and the industrial and utilities conflicts
category with 36 cases.
Explaining the observation, Krishna said water is important and India is
known for bad management of water resources. "This leads to shortage,
leading to conflicts. There is also the appropriation of water sources
and channels by industrial units with political nexus," he said.
Anup Kumar Das, an author of the Current Science article includes cases related to infrastructure and built environment, waste management, nuclear, biomass and land conflicts, tourism recreation and biodiversity conservation conflicts in the categories.
So far, the EJAtlas details 1,671 conflicts. Joan Martinez-Alier,
professor at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain and member of
the EJOLT co-ordinating team, many conflicts may be underreported,
especially in India. “This is the largest country in the world in terms
of population, and very likely in terms of environmental conflicts,” he
says
Krishna adds that countries which are good at gathering and distributing
evidence around climate change and resources tend to be better at
avoiding violent conflict arising from these issues. "If there is a fit
between knowledge generation and decision making, it helps,” says
Krishna. “In India there is a very weak or no link between these two
domains of policymaking.”


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