Birender Singh calls upon corporates and the state governments to participate in Clean India Mission with dedication and commitment

  • 02/07/2015

  • India Environment Portal

Birender Singh calls upon corporate to participate in the clean India Mission with dedication and commitment. He also asked the state government to choose and adopt from 54 affordable, scalable, sustainable technologies to solve the problems of drinking water contamination and to construct cost effective toilets in the rural areas. These technologies have been approved by the Technology Expert Committee of the Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation said Rural Development Minister and the Minister of Drinking water and sanitation, Shri Birender Singh at the workshop on the subject at Delhi. He also inaugurated an exhibition where the experts and scientists are demonstrating affordable technologies to tackle the problem of water contamination and for construction of low cost toilets. He also exhorted the NGOs to participate in the clean India Mission with renewed zeal and assured them all support in this regard. The Minister of State for Drinking Water and Sanitation, Shri Ram Kripal Yadav said that even after 68 years of Independence, more than 60 percent people in the country indulge in open defecation. He said this is not only shameful but this is also a big health hazard for the rural people particularly the children as drinking water gets contaminated. He said, women suffer more due to the absence of toilets in the rural areas and it is also directly linked with their security as most of the incidents of the rape happen when women go for open defecation. The Minister called for making swachhta that is cleanliness a people’s movement and laid stress on creating mass awareness for this. Speaking on the occasion, Secretary, Drinking Water and Sanitation, Vijay Luxmi Joshi said that 7 crore toilets have to be built by 2nd October 2019, which she said is not a big challenge but the usage of the toilets is certainly a very big issue and for this mindset has to be changed. She said, another big challenge is that 85 percent of water used is from the groundwater which is getting slowly dried up and also getting contaminated and all should work together to reverse this trend. She informed that still more than 64,000 habitations in the country have the problem of water contamination and the technology is the only key to rectify the same. She also invited the corporate sector to avail the business opportunity in the areas of toilet and sanitary wares as huge number of toilets will be built in the next four years. Dr R.A.Mashelkar, former DG, CSIR and the Chairman of the Technology Expert Committee of the Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation said in his address that rapidly deployable cost effective technology is the need of the hour and he urged the stakeholders to participate in this mission with renewed zeal vigour. He said, Center had already approved more than 50 cost-effective technologies to tackle the problem of the water contamination and sanitation at the village level, but the challenge is to deploy them in a fast pace mode. Dr Mashelkar said, for recycling of the waste, not only Best Practice but the Next Practice should be adopted.