Haryana panchayats helping curb stubble burning to be rewarded

Haryana panchayats helping curb stubble burning to be rewarded


Play all audios:


Haryana Environment Minister Vipul Goel today said a reward of Rs 50,000 each to 100 gram panchayats will be given if they pass a resolution that they would not allow any crop residue


burning in their villages. Haryana Environment Minister Vipul Goel today said a reward of Rs 50,000 each to 100 gram panchayats will be given if they pass a resolution that they would not


allow any crop residue burning in their villages. The reward would be paid by the Haryana State Pollution Control Board (HSPCB) every year to the panchayats in the major paddy-producing


districts. The panchayats would be rewarded subject to confirmation of "zero burning" in those villages as verified by the reports of the district-level committee and the Haryana


Space Applications Centre (HARSAC) remote sensing data, he said. The HSPCB had been implementing its enforcement functions, besides creating awareness among the people and providing


incentives to those who are refraining from crop residue burning, the minister said. "District-level committees have been constituted for monitoring, and at state level, the situation


is being closely monitored by the high-level committee," he said. Goel said Punjab and Haryana have been facing severe criticism for the practice of burning the crop residues,


especially in the paddy harvesting season during the onset of winter in November and December every year. Environmentalists claim that this practice has contributed adversely to severe air


pollution in Delhi and National Capital Region districts. During the worst-ever crisis of air pollution experienced in November and December last year, these two states were blamed for not


controlling crop burning effectively. The National Green Tribunal came down heavily on the states, insisting on introduction of policy-level decisions on incentives, distribution of


eco-friendly harvest equipment and enforcement. (This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)