Business Recorder
EDITORIAL: The Punjab Environment Protection Agency’s decision to mandate green buffer zones around industrial clusters is both timely and necessary. For a province grappling with worsening environmental pollution, rising urban temperatures, and a steady loss of green cover, this initiative marks a welcome shift from reactive firefighting to preventive planning. It reflects an understanding of a simple yet often overlooked principle: environmental protection cannot remain an afterthought to industrial growth; it must be embedded within it. Green buffer belts are far more than aesthetic additions. When carefully designed and maintained, they serve as living filters—absorbing particulate matter, reducing noise pollution, and creating both physical and mental separation between hazardous industrial activity and nearby residential communities. In densely populated parts of Punjab, where urban sprawl frequently encroaches upon industrial zones, such buffers can play a crucial role in limiting public exposure to harmful emissions. This is particularly important in the context of recurring smog crises, where multiple pollution sources—from vehicular emissions to crop residue burning—collectively intensify the health burden on citizens. What makes the EPA’s framework especially noteworthy is its attempt to move beyond token plantation drives. By linking compliance to inspections, environmental audits, and the possibility of legal action, the policy introduces a level of seriousness often lacking in environmental governance. Too many past initiatives have faltered due to reliance on voluntary compliance or weak follow-through. The explicit prohibition of unauthorised tree cutting, along with the requirement for prior approval, is another important step toward safeguarding existing green assets—an objective as important as planting new ones. However, the effectiveness of this initiative will ultimately depend on its implementation. Environmental policies in Pakistan are often well-conceived on paper but undermined by weak enforcement, limited institutional capacity, and, at times, political interference. Monitoring thousands of industrial units across Punjab will require not just manpower, but also transparency and accountability. In this regard, digital tracking systems, public disclosure of compliance data, and community participation could significantly strengthen oversight and reduce the risk of regulatory capture. Equally important is the need to prioritise quality over quantity. Plantation targets frequently result in hurried campaigns that emphasise numbers rather than ecological suitability. For buffer zones to deliver meaningful results, decisions regarding species selection, planting density, and long-term maintenance must be guided by scientific principles. Native species, better adapted to local conditions and more effective in pollutant absorption, should be prioritised over ornamental or fast-growing varieties that offer limited environmental value. If implemented with consistency and foresight, green buffer zones could serve as a model for integrating environmental safeguards into industrial policy. The real test, however, lies in execution—ensuring that this promising framework does not remain confined to official notifications, but instead takes root, both literally and figuratively, across Punjab, with other provinces following suit. Copyright Business Recorder, 2026
Go to News Site