Delhi CM Rekha Gupta inaugurates 18 'Namo Oxygen Park' on World Environment Day
New Delhi, June 5
On the occasion of World Environment Day, Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta on Friday inaugurated the eighteen 'Namo Oxygen Park' at Maidangarhi and also planted a sapling as part of the citywide environmental awareness initiative.
The event, marking World Environment Day, focused on promoting green mobility and urban afforestation efforts. The 'Namo Oxygen Park' initiative aims to spread awareness on pollution control and increase green outreach across Delhi.
Environment Minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa and Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav also planted a sapling at Maidangarhi.
During the programme held at Maidangarhi, the Chief Minister, along with Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav, launched 18 Namo Van Parks from Maidangarhi on the occasion.
Addressing the gathering at the launch event, CM Gupta urged to form a local caretaking committee for each of the parks.
Expressed happiness over 15 lakh trees and saplings plantation in the national capital this year, she said, "I am happy to share today that we are not only encouraging tree plantation but have also resolved to plant 15 lakhs trees and saplings in Delhi this year, a process we have already initiated... Regarding the 18 oxygen parks currently being developed at various locations, I urge that a local caretaking committee be formed for each of the parks."
She further called local residents to get involved in maintaining the trees to give them better protection for greener Delhi.
"When local residents get involved, the trees will receive better maintenance, watering, and protection; this kind of sustained effort is essential for Delhi... if we plant trees as part of the 'Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam' launched by our Prime Minister, then a greener Delhi is guaranteed..." she added.
In a post on X. CM Gupta wrote, "Delhi is going green, and every citizen has a role to play. This World Environment Day, work begins on 18 Namo Oxygen Parks as we move towards the vision of 100 Oxygen Parks across Delhi. 15 lakh trees to be planted this year. We'll provide the saplings and identify the locations. Join the movement. Plant a tree. Nurture a greener Delhi. My Delhi. My Responsibility."
Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Narendra Modi also extended greetings, while lauding the efforts of the people dedicated to environmental conservation.
Focusing on the steps taken by the Central government and the country towards protecting the environment, PM Modi stated that the key successes include the expansion of green cover area and an increase in the population of several animals.
World Environment Day (WED) is observed every year on June 5. It was established by the United Nations General Assembly in 1972 during the Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment.
The first celebration was held in 1973, with the theme "Only One Earth." Each year, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) selects a specific environmental theme and designates a global host country to spotlight a major environmental issue. This approach helps focus international attention and action on critical environmental challenges.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Good start but let's see execution. CM Gupta's call for citizen involvement is key - we need to stop treating parks as government property only. But 100 oxygen parks target sounds ambitious given land constraints in Delhi. Hope they're actually creating new green spaces, not just renaming existing ones.
Bhai, these 'Namo' parks everywhere now - first Namo metro, then Namo ghats, now Namo oxygen parks. Let's focus on actual pollution reduction, not just naming. Delhi's air is still toxic for months. Tree planting alone won't solve our stubble burning and vehicle emission problems.
Love the citizen participation angle! We planted 50 saplings in our society last month after local NGO workshop. If every resident group does this across Delhi, imagine the impact. Kudos to CM for linking it to 'Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam' - emotional connect increases commitment. 🌳
Impressive initiative. But as someone who lived in Delhi for 5 years, I saw many tree plantation drives fail because the species selected weren't native or suited to Delhi's climate. Hope they're planting local varieties like Neem, Peepal, and Amaltas that actually survive our harsh summers. Also, water availability for these saplings during dry months?
World Environment Day and politicians planting saplings - becoming too predictable yaar. CM planted one, ministers planted one. But does anyone follow up? Last year's plantation drives in my area - many saplings dead within months due to no watering. Need a proper maintenance plan, not just photo ops 📸. Still,
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