Premium
This is an archive article published on May 21, 2015

India ranks 24th out of 70 countries in the first Environmental Democracy Index

India has ranked 24th out of 70 countries in the first Environmental Democracy Index that is topped by Lithuania.

India environment, environment, environment index, environment day, world environment day, world environment index, Environmental Democracy Index, India Environmental Democracy Index, india news, world news India has ranked 24th out of 70 countries in the first Environmental Democracy Index that is topped by Lithuania. (Source: Wikicommons)

India has ranked 24th out of 70 countries in the first Environmental Democracy Index that is topped by Lithuania and evaluates nations’ progress in enacting laws to promote transparency, accountability and citizen engagement in environmental decision-making.

Lithuania, Latvia, Russia, the US, South Africa, the UK, Hungary, Bulgaria, Panama and Colombia are the top 10 nations in the list launched by Washington-based World Resources Institute (WRI) and Access Initiative yesterday.

The index evaluates environmental democracy in 70 countries, including 75 legal and 24 practice indicators, based on recognised international standards.

Story continues below this ad

“With a number of critical moments in environment and sustainability in 2015, advancing good governance and environmental rights are essential.

This index is a powerful lever that will help governments to become more transparent and ordinary citizens to advocate for more rights,” said Mark Robinson, global director, Governance, WRI.

“For the first time, we have an objective, common index to understand the state of environmental democracy for countries around the world, which is essential to strengthen laws and public participation around environmental issues,” he said.

According to the report, 93 per cent of the assessed countries have established the right to environmental information.

Story continues below this ad

However, almost half of these countries (45 per cent) do not have strong protections to ensure that access to information is affordable and timely, it said.

“Environmental democracy isn’t just about making environmental information available to the public; that’s an essential first step, but governments must also allow citizens to be a meaningful part of the environmental decision-making process,” said Avi Garbow, general counsel, US Environmental Protection Agency.

The vast majority of countries assessed (79 per cent) earned only fair or poor ratings for public participation, the report said, adding that many nations lag on providing citizens basic environmental information.

Nearly half (46 per cent) of the countries assessed do not provide any ambient air quality data online for their capital cities.

Story continues below this ad

In 73 per cent of the countries, courts will hear environmental cases. But very few countries assessed have assistance for marginalized groups, the report said.

Only 14 per cent of the countries have legal mechanisms that help women access courts to obtain redress when their environmental rights are violated, it added.

Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement

You May Like

Advertisement