Wednesday, 6 July 2016

Preetham Kodiripaka, an Environmentalist

Preetham Kodiripaka has stayed in the forefront of natural activism for the last two and half decades. He has been connected with various NGOs required in natural exercises and he likewise drives a little non-financed organization. He has been a dynamic member and counsel to endeavors like restoring water bodies and other renewable resources.
He trusts that the likelihood of genuine water and ecological emergency because of lessening quantities of water bodies in the nation must be tended to by better administration of the current water bodies through mechanical developments. For Preetham, environment can't be delinked from peoples’ livelihood concerns. So he accentuates ecological change, alongside advancement.
He has propelled a few social projects, in light of asset based country improvement and has been accounted for to be fruitful in giving the town’s water factories, fertilizing the soil pits, toilets, plan-based medications and home grown pesticides and water collecting methods.
His significant concerns lie with the earth (particularly, the communication of individuals with nature), innovation (connection of individuals with machines), and organizations and approaches (collaboration of individuals with individuals). He has demonstrated that humankind's choice of technologies, the existing design of our institutions, consumption patterns, and production systems must be fundamentally transformed if we want to ensure Earth's long-term ecological security.

Furthermore, he believes technologies must be more human in scale, less inefficient in assets, and specifically receptive to the essential needs of individuals. In a developing country, for example, India, where monetary and social variations in the public eye are expansive, the poor tend to over use and wreck renewable assets out of the exigencies of survival and need; also the rich tend to over use and wreck different sorts of assets, for example, non-renewable assets, frequently out of eagerness. Accordingly, just by expanding social value, and annihilating neediness, mankind can have an effect on ecological preservation and decrease the dangers to the asset base.