|
Tata
Chemicals wins the Green Governance Award
November 14,
2005
Tata
Chemicals has won the Green Governance Award 2005 for
its project "Conservation of the Whale Shark".
The award was given by Dr Manmohan Singh, Hon. Prime
Minister of India on November 10, 2005 at a ceremony
in Vigyan Bhavan, New Delhi.
The Green Governance Awards have
been instituted by Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS)
in order to provide impetus to sustainable development
and to encourage environmental protection initiatives.
The purpose of the award is to recognise and appreciate
an organisation's efforts beyond meeting statutory compliance
for protection and conservation of the environment.
Said Prasad Menon, managing director,
Tata Chemicals, "It was imperative to create an
awareness amongst the local community about the significance
of these gentle animals and ensure their long term survival.
Tata Chemicals partnered with various organisations
to ensure that we achieved this objective. The project
succeeded in creating an emotional bond between the
coastal communities and the whale shark, through interpretation
of Indian traditions."
Tata Chemicals won the award
in the category Conservation of Fauna. Tata Chemicals
started work on this Whale Shark Conservation project
in September 2003, and has used unique and innovative
conservation intervention techniques that have brought
about positive results in terms of popularising and
ensuring the long-term survival of the whale shark
the largest fish on this planet. The approach involved
all stakeholders in the whale shark's universe, including
the whale shark hunters, boatmen, coastal communities,
the forest department, the coast guard, school children
and conservation NGOs. Tata Chemicals partnered with
Wildlife Trust of India (WTI), an NGO of international
repute in this project. The project won international
acclaim at the Whale Shark Conservation Conference at
Perth, Australia in May 2005, where experts noted that
the approach deployed by Tata Chemicals and WTI is a
role model for other developing nations where traditional
values are strong.
The pre-requisite for this
award is for the organisation to have robust environment
management systems, that include recycle / reuse of
effluents, environmental quality monitoring and management,
use of clean technology, emergency preparedness, energy
conservation techniques, and training of employees in
environmental protection, and conservation of biodiversity.

|
|