We Need Airports and Dams – But Here’s Why You Should Care About the Environment

Photo: christianhaugen/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

Kochi: Dams, roads, railway lines, power plants, airports. The list of infrastructure projects India is working on is pretty long. According to the Indian government, these projects will make the country more developed and expand the national economy.

But many of these projects come at the expense of the environment, and in many cases, the cost is steep. For example, political leaders have been loudly demanding the Mekedatu dam in Karnataka – but it will submerge around 5,000 hectares of the Cauvery Wildlife Sanctuary.

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India needs development, but India also needs its environment. Here are five reasons you may need to think twice about ‘developmental projects’ before you say environmentalists are creating much ado over nothing.

Reason 1: The environment at large provides ecosystem services.

A view of a coral reef. Photo: Fascinating Universe/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0

An ecosystem is the community of life-forms that share a physical environment. The natural world – from lush rainforests in protected areas to the lake near your house – contains many ecosystems.

Every ecosystem evolves with all of its components – plants, trees, the soil, animals, birds, insects, etc. – often over hundreds of years. Humans derive a lot of value from them: trees hold the soil and provide timber, fruits and vegetables; plants and insects together help each other through pollination and seed dispersal; microbes in the soil help decompose organic matter; and the system as a whole purifies water, controls erosion, slows floods and stores carbon.

If you remove one component of an ecosystem, the whole thing could collapse.

Reason 2: The environment has economic value.

A portion of a honeycomb, showing the precisely constructed hexagonal cells; all but one bee have been removed. Photo: Matthew T. Rader/MatthewTRader.com, CC-BY-SA

Aside from direct economic value, the natural environment has indirect value as well.

For example, the wild relatives of food crops hold the key for farmers to develop better hybrids. This is more important in the time of climate change, when we will need more disease-resistant or salt-tolerant varieties so we can stay nourished.

Other examples of similar value include: