Answer :

                                       Green City, Clean City


Green is clean. The green mountains, forests, fields, pastures, parks, etc. all are not only beautiful but divinely pure. The current state of cities in India is pathetic. They are almost completely devoid of trees. What makes the situation worse is absence of proper garbage and sewage treatment plants. In this scenario the cities in India will soon become inhospitable.


In order to keep that possibility at bay, the cities must be made green. Undoubtedly, planting the trees throughout the city will definitely make them green and healthy to live in, but there are other measures that will have to be implemented. The next aspect to be focused on is monitoring toxic emissions of industries and vehicles. Installation of toxic smoke and effluents treatment plants must be mandatory at every industrial unit.


The Government must take the initiative to make pollution free vehicles available. People must be educated and encouraged to decrease their carbon footprint. They must adopt ways to keep their surroundings and cities spick and span and green. These green and clean cities are in the making. However, we will have to make it faster.   




A city with a lot of greenery is always cleaner than one which has been denuded of its greenery. A classic example of one such city in India is Bengaluru, the capital city of Karnataka. If a city has flowering shrubs, ornamental plants and tree-lined roads it is less dusty and there is plenty of oxygen in the atmosphere.
The colour green is also associated with environment friendliness. So, if a city administration is able to reduce the use of plastics, discipline car owners regarding use of less polluting fuel and popularise the use of cooking gas as domestic fuel, then it ensures the pollution level of the city remains within acceptable limits, thereby not affecting the health of the citizens and not adding to the menace of global warming.