Eighteen years ago, I visited the little industrial town of Valsad on
the Gujarat coast, with a prospective client.
He had a marvellous technology for pollution treatment and was talking
to Atul Dyes, a large dyes producer, for installing a pilot plant. As we walked around the ageing, partly
decrepit factory, I asked a pending question to the factory employee who was taking
us around, ‘You must be needing loads of water for the plant?’ He nodded and gave me a figure in millions of
litres, adding ‘It comes from the river
nearby.’ I continued, ‘And what do you do
with the liquid effluent from the factory – the equally large volumes of
coloured waste water from the production process?’ He grimaced a bit and pointed to the sea. ‘Our
pipe goes three kilometres out, along the seabed.’
I had never, till that moment, come face-to-face with such insanity:
fresh water to factory –> factory converts fresh water to toxic effluent –>
effluent to sea.
And, just as the reality hit, another one did as well: that this chap
saw nothing wrong with all of this, it was business as usual, another day at
work.
Today, April 22nd, is Earth Day. Across the World, particularly the ‘developed’
world, corporates organise the standard speech-conserve-plant-a-tree routine,
partly out of sympathy for the poor planet, largely out of the positive
messages that they send out to all concerned.
In India too, many of the larger companies do the same – the big boss
gets a tree planted in his name, everyone cheers, there are lots of soft drinks
and snacks passed around, a few banners (all of which create their own waste,
of course) and the juggernaut moves on.
Perhaps a CEO or two will refer to the company’s work in reducing
environmental impact by installing a scrubber here or a fuel-efficient
generator there. Perhaps, he will add
that two per cent of profits are now being ploughed into corporate social
responsibility, as per an amendment to Company Law.
The hypocrisy of it all is lamentable.
Nobody really understands what CSR means. Can I set up a cola factory by digging forty
borewells in an area with average rainfall, and spend that 2% on providing
drinking water to nearby villages (Coca Cola)?
Can I blow up a mountain for granite or alumina and set up a school for
the tribal children with the 2% of the profits from the destruction of the
mountain (Vedanta)? Can we sell
cigarettes for a living (and make every effort to sell more year after year),
but harvest water for stakeholder villages (ITC)? Can we contaminate an entire landscape and
its watershed with mercury and then empower women self-help groups to sell our
products (HUL)? Can we set up an extra
large port in a area where endangered turtles nest and then, quite separately,
fund conservation research (Tata Group)?
Can we set up a destructive, Rs. 6400 crore hydro project in an
ecological treasure in Arunachal Pradesh that is the last habitat of the black
necked crane, and then provide drinking water to a few villages in Rajasthan
(LNJ Bhilwara group)? The litany – and litany
it is – goes on…..
The two percent clause has given companies an easy way out to justify
the unjustifiable, to throw money at the small picture in the hope that the big
picture will be obfuscated, repositioned, concealed behind the convenient
curtain of the word ‘development’ and the entirely chimerical notion of Gross
Domestic Product growth. GDP, as
economic history and data informs us, is just a average. Its recent history tells us that GDP means nothing
other than more inequality, more concentration of wealth and natural resources,
more agglomeration of power, influence and voice in the path of future material
creation for the average human. More GDP
today has come to mean more destruction.
So, why is this - the power and cold hypocrisy of the corporate sector in general - important to understand?
In the year 2000, a study Sarah Anderson and John Cavanagh of the Institute for
Policy Studies revealed that 51 of the top economies of the World
were corporations and 49 were countries.
General Motors, for example, was bigger than Denmark, while Walmart was
bigger than Norway.
In the last fifteen years, this concentration of wealth has grown, not
reduced, though the corporations in the top 100 have changed. For instance, the GDP (Revenues) of Monsanto
– a company with a particularly dodgy record of producing toxic pesticides like
glyphosate - is over twice the GDP of Nepal, a poor country with 35% of its income
coming from agriculture – can farmers’ collectives in small economies negotiate
with the Monsanto’s of the world in a truly win-win way that gives them more
control on their lives, their health and the future of their watersheds?
There is enough data today to suggest that corporate power breeds
irresponsibility (with few, very few, exceptions). As urbanities and consumers, we have a big,
big responsibility to counter this callousness because we are consumers. Before we buy anything, we must make it a
point to study more about the impact of our decisions on the planet. If there is no need to buy something, do not
buy it; perhaps it can be borrowed on mutual goodwill? Simple as this sounds, it is the best that we
can do for a deteriorating planet. If,
to this, we add the consumption of organic food or home-grown food and the
careful, parsimonious usage of water, we would have done our bit.
As an aside: after the visit to Atul Dyes, I came back to Bangalore
convinced that the startup that we were looking at funding was critical, its
technology was marvellous and we just had to do this deal, both for the
financial returns that could ensue and for the environmental impact it would
make. My boss disagreed, his
disagreement affecting our otherwise positive working relationship as well as
my annual performance review. I now
believe that this was the tipping point, the moment when I decided to leave the
VC business, indeed to give the corporate sector a go-by; it’s a decision I have
never ever regretted.
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