DANISH-INDIAN RESEARCH COLLABORATION
ON AIR POLLUTION AND CLIMATE


Environmental Panorama
International
April of 2009


Air pollution in Delhi today can be just as bad as the London smog in December 1952 which led to 12,000 excess deaths. Photo: DMU

By Steen Voigt

National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), Aarhus University is well underway with plans for a collaborative Danish-Indian environment and climate research centre in cooperation with the University of Delhi . In February three NERI researchers travelled to the Indian capital to take the plans further still.

Air pollution in India ’s capital, New Delhi is periodically as high as during the London smog of December 1952 which resulted in 12,000 excess deaths.

Reducing the massive levels of air pollution in Delhi and other Indian cities forms an important part of the background to the Danish-Indian research collaboration between NERI and the University of Delhi . The University of Copenhagen is also involved in the collaboration, one that will lead to the establishment of an international environment and climate research centre. The centre will be interdisciplinary and, to start with, will provide the setting for a dozen or so PhD and postdoctoral students from the university. Furthermore, an annual, high profile course in atmospheric research and climate will be run especially for Indian students, but also students from other countries in the region.

Family photo from the collaborative NERI-University of Delhi workshop on atmospheric research and climate change which attracted 200 participants. NERI staff, Ole Hertel, Henrik Skov and Michael E. Goodsite together with a selection of Indian colleagues and students.

The Delhi centre
Researchers from NERI’s Department of Atmospheric Environment have just returned from a visit to the university in New Delhi to go through the project with their Indian colleagues.

’The university is making available all the necessary facilities for the centre and we are in the process of finding money to finance the teaching itself and our share of the research’, says Professor Michael Evan Goodsite. He and senior researchers, Ole Hertel and Henrik Skov are NERI’s representatives in the collaboration.

Supervision and teaching will be carried out in collaboration between the Danish and Indian researchers as well as partners in other countries. A ‘public-private partnership’ (PPP) is planned, which means a company which receives sponsorship from the university. This company, as a spin-off activity from the centre, will develop sustainable solutions.

Michael Evan Goodsite, who also has an MBA in global management, is spearheading the initiative, to which international partners have already pledged their participation. The University of Delhi ’s Chancellor, Vice Chancellor, Professor Deepak Pental as well as Pro-Vice Chancellor, Professor Tandon Sampat Kumar give their full support to establishment of the centre. Professor Kumar, a recognised palaeoclimatologist, is taking up the post as head of the centre.

Senior researchers, Ole Hertel and Henrik Skov tell of the highly positive nature of their visit to the University of Delhi :

’We see this initiative as a very important opportunity to disseminate our knowledge to a society with over a billion inhabitants. With India ’s growth in population as well as in consumption of energy and other resources it is of crucial importance that the country also takes on its share of the global environmental responsibility.’

Goodsite adds:

’In terms of improving global climate, moving India, a country in development, 1 meter is like moving Denmark, an industrialised country, 1 kilometer. The initiative demonstrates that India is interested in making a contribution.’

Facts about the university
The University of Delhi is India ’s leading university. It has 14 faculties and 220,000 students. India ’s Vice President is the Chancellor of the university.

Facts about air pollution
On top of the damaging health effects of urban air pollution, India contributes substantially to the global emission of greenhouse gases. After China , India is the country in the world that burns the most coal, and this combustion takes place with no or very little flue gas cleaning. Coal combustion takes place in connection with power generation, but coal is also used to a large degree in private households. The result is, among other things, a large emission of sulphur and soot, especially in the towns themselves. Based on the current state of population growth and economic development in the country, these emissions are expected to continue to increase in the years to come.

 
 

Source: Denmark's Ministry of the Environment
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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