Difficult Word/ Phrase | Contextual Sense |
Reckless | Marked by defiant disregard for danger or consequences |
Spree | Engage without restraint in an activity |
Heed | Pay close attention to |
Subsidence | A gradual sinking to a lower level |
Emblematic | Being or serving as an illustration of a type |
Sag | Sink |
Nick | Cut slightly |
Strata | One of several parallel layers of material arranged one on top of another |
Wash one’s hands of | disclaim responsibility for |
Call on | Have recourse to or make an appeal or request for help or information to |
Prone | Having a tendency |
Emit | Expel (gases or odours) |
Plunder | use or use up wrongfully |
The land subsidence (A gradual sinking to a lower level) in Joshimath has become emblematic (Being or serving as an illustration of a type) of a geological disaster that has in fact manifested across India, in the neighbourhood of several large resource-extraction projects. There have been reports of subsidence from the Jharia, Bhurkunda, Kapasara, Raniganj and Talcher coal mines; from Delhi and Kolkata due to the over-extraction of groundwater; and from Mehsana for hydrocarbons. Last year, land in Chamba, Himachal Pradesh, began to sag (sink) shortly after a hydroelectric power project began test runs, calling into question the effects of the Tapovan Vishnugad facility near Joshimath in Uttarakhand. In 2010, some months after a tunnel-boring machine nicked (Cut slightly) an underground aquifer near Joshimath, leading to substantial water discharge, two researchers wrote in Current Science that the “sudden and large scale dewatering of the strata (One of several parallel layers of material arranged one on top of another) has the potential” to trigger “ground subsidence in the region”. Determining whether the ongoing incident can be traced directly to the 2009 aquifer puncture is complicated by the lack of long-term scientific investigations of the area. On January 5, the NTPC issued a statement washing its hands of (Wash one’s hands of means disclaim responsibility for) the unfolding crisis after locals began pointing fingers at Tapovan Vishnugad, as well as the Helang-Marwari bypass as part of the Char Dham project. Scientists from the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research-National Geophysical Research Institute set out on January 10 to examine the circumstances of the subsidence. Both the national and the State governments must heed the team’s findings, even if it means ceasing further construction work.
Experts and civil society have called on (Have recourse to or make an appeal or request for help or information to) the government on many occasions to ease its dam-building spree, of late over rivers in the north and the Northeast; to moderate tourism in the regions to be sustainable; and to not blow off unstable hillsides to widen roads. Heavy rains in Aizawl in July triggered subsidence, exposing poor zoning enforcement and oversight of the regional carrying capacity. But in Joshimath, which is particularly prone (Having a tendency) to landslides, questions about zoning, carrying capacity and tipping points have all been set aside. The subsidence in Joshimath has captured the nation’s attention because it is a destination for both pilgrims and tourists, but it is far from being the site of the first or the deadliest incident. The government must undertake whatever repair and restoration efforts it is undertaking at Joshimath at all the other sites as well. Finally, the national and the State governments must listen to both science and the people already living near mines and dams. There is an argument to allow economically developing countries to emit (Expel (gases or odours)) more before becoming carbon-neutral, but it is not a free pass to plunder (use or use up wrongfully) natural resources at the cost of climate justice.
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