The new Science, Technology and Earth Sciences Minister Sudini Jaipal Reddy can contribute to undo India's pathetic scientific reputation in terms of invention and innovation, says Gopal Krishna.
Outstanding
Parliamentarian Sudini Jaipal Reddy, the new minister of science,
technology and earth sciences deserves salute for his role as a minister
of petroleum and natural gas from where he has been shifted in a stark
controversial move. Some external forces who believe in getting the law
changed if the law is not favourable and getting the minister and
officers changed if they are honest, have prevailed once again in the
way it did earlier in the case Mani Shankar Aiyar.
First, reminding our romnesiac prime
minister of his inaugural speech at the 99th Indian Science Congress in
January 2012, the new minister should seek enhanced budgetary allocation
for his ministry. Although the prime minister emphasised the need for a
major increase in investment in research and development, the
allocation of funds for the science and technology sector in the Union
Budget for 2012-13 was highly unsatisfactory. Admittedly, the current
spending on R&D in the country was "too low and stagnant" at about
one per cent of GDP. The current allocations for the science ministries
and departments reveal the prime minister's insincerity.
Second, the imminent launch of the Rs 450 crore Mars Orbiter Mission to study martian atmosphere from the spaceport in
Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh, making India the sixth country to launch
after United States, Russia, Europe, Japan and China in November next year merits his attention. The first thing
he should is to set up a high-level scientific team to study why the
mars mission by China and Japan was abandoned midway. The spacecraft is
expected to take nearly 300 days to reach the martian orbit. The
spacecraft will be placed in an orbit of 500x80,000 km around mars and
has a tentative scientific objective for studying the climate, geology,
origin, evolution and sustainability of life on the planet.
The Union Cabinet approved the mission at
a meeting on August 4, which was announced by the prime minister in his
66th Independence Day address.
Third, at a time when exploitation of
unfathomable global commons like the deep sea bed, Antarctica and space
is imminent and the UN even has a committee to discuss resource
exploitation on the moon his role in turning the current reductionist
approach of the ministry into a holistic approach towards the
life-bearing planet will be path breaking. He must undo the current well
entrenched inequality by ensuring that most scientific findings become
available in vernacular languages in real time instead of letting it
trickle down after decades. The access to most fruits of modern science
and technology is getting cornered by 1 per cent private interests at
the cost of commons. Industries displace more earth per annum than is
lost through natural erosion.
The annual runoff from aquifer mining
nearly matches the sea level rise from the "melt" of polar glaciers; and
there is 3 to 6 times more water dammed than in natural rivers. Its
adverse impact will be unprecedented. Knowledge of the carrying capacity
of earth's space occupied by India is extremely limited this must be
ascertained before replumbing of planet unfolds and before it is too
late.
Fourth, while the international nature of
scientific inquiry is admitted what appears forgotten is that science
exists in a local/national social setting. If that setting is molded
decisively the conceptual growth of science will determine the depth of
its influence. The ministry must overhaul its institutional structure to
reach every local setting, every village of the country.
Fifth, technological transformation at
least since 1992 through information technologies, biotechnologies and
engineering has unfolded amidst lack of trusted and transparent
mechanisms for technology evaluation at global, regional and national
levels. India is not an exception to such unhealthy trend. It may be
recollected that Agenda 21's Chapter 34 had called for regional
capacity-building for technology assessment but in 1993, the UN all but
eliminated its Center for Science and Technology for Development, moved
the remnants from New York to UNCTAD in Geneva, and, simultaneously,
eradicated its Centre on Transnational Corporations, thus terminating
the minimal global capacity that had existed to monitor and advice on
new technologies and on private sector technology transfer.
There is a surveillance regime emerging
for people but not technologies. The speed and cost of mapping the human
genome has dropped from 13 years and $1.3 billion to 14 days and $5,000
en route to 15 minutes and a few hundred dollars soon after 2012.
Governments have spent more than $50 billion on nanotech research &
development; the cost of carbon nanotubes has dropped by a factor of 20
since 2001. It is frightening that there are thousands of consumer
products that rely on it but there is no agreed nanotech definition or
regulation.
As to synthetic biology, undergraduates
with $400 gene synthesisers can download templates to build DNA while
scientists can create self-replicating artificial microbes and six
letter DNA. The world is moving towards a convergence era. Governments
and scientific institutions are predicting the unification of "Bits,
Atoms, Neurons and Genes" as the next Industrial Revolution transforming
trade, economies and industrial production unfortunately without
evaluation.
Failure of new technologies and
innovations without evaluation since the 1992 Earth Summit proved
socially, ecologically and financially costly in Europe and globally.
The greatest technological transformation in history has occurred over
the last 20 years while governments systematically downsized or
eliminated their capacity to comprehend science and monitor
technologies. The minister must create an institutional architecture
that can make technology companies and their unverified and experimental
technologies subservient to legislative will and institutional
regulation.
Ministers come and go at the whims and
fancies of ungovernable business enterprises in all the parliamentary
democracies but the positive impact the minister can leave behind on
country's science, technology and India's share of earth can contribute
to undo India's pathetic scientific reputation in terms of invention and
innovation.
Gopal Krishna
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