1. China’s growth as the Great Power is largely responsible for Asia’s weakening the environment. Most important it damages …show more content…
More than 70% of the world lived in the rural Areas and they have used much water, they have much food for themselves and they are mostly depending directly or indirectly on water for the livelihoods. Rain may be fall in good quantity for some farmers but in many places it falls when it is not needed and when it is needed it vanishes.
With so much talk about a global water crisis, about water scarcity, and about increasing competition and conflicts over water, it would be easy to get the impression that Earth is running dry. You could be forgiven for wondering whether, in the not-too-distant future, there will be sufficient water to produce enough to eat and drink. World is suffering from severe kind of water shortages.
The problem is the quantity of water required for food production. People will need more and more water for more and more agriculture. Yet the way people use water in agriculture is the most significant provider to create problems for the economic sector, industries and water scarcity. These problems should be noticed by the government institutes …show more content…
Some of the worst pollution incidents caused great human suffering.
One of the first episodes began in the late 19th century, when copper mining operations released effluents that contaminated rivers and rice fields in the mountains of central Honshu, sickening much of the local population. Crusading legislator Tanaka Shozo led citizen protests that represented an important first step in the creation of a Japanese environmental movement.
Since that time, Japan acted strictly on legislation for environment protection. Then government takes important steps to improve environment quality in the late 1960s and early 1970s in response to pressure by citizens’ groups. Government passed successive laws to counter environment issues and also compensate to the victims of environment pollution. In 1971 it established the Environmental Agency to monitor and regulate pollution. The Nature Conservation Law of 1972 requires that all natural ecosystems be investigated every five