An Analysis of Physical and Monetary Losses of Environmental Health and Natural Resources in India

This study provides estimates of social and financial costs of environmental damage in India from three pollution damage categories: (i) urban air pollution; (ii) inadequate water supply, poor sanitation, and hygiene; and (iii) indoor air pollution...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mani, Muthukumara, Markandya, Anil, Sagar, Aarsi, Strukova, Elena
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
OIL
WTP
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/10/16812484/analysis-physical-monetary-losses-environmental-health-natural-resources-india
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12065
Description
Summary:This study provides estimates of social and financial costs of environmental damage in India from three pollution damage categories: (i) urban air pollution; (ii) inadequate water supply, poor sanitation, and hygiene; and (iii) indoor air pollution. It also provides estimates based on three natural resource damage categories: (i) agricultural damage from soil salinity, water logging, and soil erosion; (ii) rangeland degradation; and (iii) deforestation. The estimates are based on a combination of Indian data from secondary sources and on the transfer of unit costs of pollution from a range of national and international studies. The study estimates the total cost of environmental degradation in India at about 3.75 trillion rupees (US$80 billion) annually, equivalent to 5.7 percent of gross domestic product in 2009, which is the reference year for most of the damage estimates. Of this total, outdoor air pollution accounts for 1.1 trillion rupees, followed by the cost of indoor air pollution at 0.9 trillion rupees, croplands degradation cost at 0.7 trillion rupees, inadequate water supply and sanitation cost at around at 0.5 trillion rupees, pasture degradation cost at 0.4 trillion rupees, and forest degradation cost at 0.1 trillion rupees.