In News
- Flash floods and back-to-back land- slips in Kerala bring into focus the fragile ecosystem of the mountain chain that runs almost parallel to India’s western coast.
Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP) Report
- The report was submitted in 2011.
- Madhav Gadgil, ecologist and panel chairman pointed to the degradation suffered of Western Ghat.
- The report had designated the entire hill range as an Ecologically Sensitive Area (ESA).
- It had classified the 142 taluks in the Western Ghats boundary into three Ecologically Sensitive Zones (ESZs).
- It also recommended no new dams based on large scale storage be permitted in the region.
- Participatory process for development related activity involving the gram sabhas in these zones.
- The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change opposed disclosure of the report stating that it could affect the economic and scientific interests of the six States.
- The successive State governments opposed it stating that most of its suggestions were impractical.
- The Centre later appointed a high level working group on Western Ghats led by K. Kasturirangan, in August, 2012 to examine the Gadgil report.
K.Kasturirangan Committee
- Mandate:
- To give special attention to the preservation of the precious biodiversity.
- Also,to consider the rights, needs and development aspirations of the local and indigenous people.
- Committee’s observation:
- It identified only 37% or 59,940 sq. km of the Western Ghats in the 6 States as ESAs.
- Around 4,156 villages along the region were identified as ESAs
- On the basis of the criterion that they had 20% or more of ecologically sensitive area within their boundary.
- Nearly 123 such villages were identified as ESAs in Kerala, provoking political and religious protests.
Oommen V. Oommen Committee
- Following the advice of the Kasturirangan Committee
- The area of 9,993.7 sq. km to be considered ESAs in Kerala as against the 13,108 sq. km area.
- It also recommended that the inhabited areas, plantations and agricultural lands in the Western Ghats region be excluded from the scope of ESA
Union Environment Ministry Draft notification of 2014
- Notified a total of 56,825 sq. km in the Western Ghats as ESA instead of the original 59,940 sq. km recommended by the Kasturirangan Committee.
- The final notification remains pending despite a directive by the Principal Bench of the National Green Tribunal
- that there is no justification for continued delay merely because the States have sought exclusion of the area from the Eco Sensitive Zone.
Apprehensions
- Farmers approached the Supreme Court to declare the Centre’s draft notification as “unconstitutional”.
- The recommendations of both the reports on land use, farming practices, animal husbandry, forestry, industries, infrastructure development, tourism, etc.
- Would convert the semiurban villages in the region into forests with no facilities and roads
Western Ghats
Economics of Western Ghats
Watershed of Western Ghats
Influence on the climatic condition
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Biological diversity:
- The Western Ghats is home to a vast biological diversity of flora and fauna including hundreds of globally threatened species.
- Many of these species are also endemic to the region.
- Covering an area of 180,000 sq.km, or just under 6 percent of the land area of India,
- It contains more than 30 percent of all the plant, fish, herpeto-fauna, bird, and mammal species found in India.
- The Western Ghats include a diversity of medicinal plants and important genetic resources such as the wild relatives of grains, fruit and spices.
- Biodiversity Crisis
- The International Union for Conservation of Nature in 2020 found that the Western Ghats is
- Under increasing population and developmental pressure.
- This requires intensive and targeted management efforts to conserve the existing values and also remediate past damages.
- The International Union for Conservation of Nature in 2020 found that the Western Ghats is
Natural disasters
- About 40% of Western Ghat ranges lie in Kerala, which makes the State particularly vulnerable to the ecological changes in the mountain chain.
- Environmentalists point to the fragile ecosystem of the Ghats and call for urgent action.
- A case of the October landslides in Kerala.
- Koottickal village in Kottayam,was removed by the State government in 2015 from the list of 123 ESAs witnessed back to back landslides.
- The increasing extreme climate events have resulted in large scale disasters and destabilised the already vulnerable districts along the Western Ghats.
- The World Meteorological Organisation had included the August deluge that rocked Kerala in 2018
- As among the five major extreme flooding events in the world between 2015 and2019.
- Official estimates showed that there were a total of 2,062 landslides in the State in 2018-19.
- Idukki was the most vulnerable with the district facing around 1,048 landslides in this period.
Ecological Threats
- Mr. Gadgil’s warnings are now resonating after the tragic loss of over 40 lives in flash floods and landslides in the aftermath of heavy rains.
- In the hilly regions of the Western Ghats in central Kerala districts of Kottayam, Idukki and Pathanamthitta.
- Gadgil reiterated that human interference and unscientific land use had worsened the already damaged ecosystem of the Western Ghats.
- The studies by the Geological Survey of India in the landslide vulnerable areas in the hilly districts of Kerala had found
- faulty cultivation patterns and defective maintenance of drainage systems.
- Geoscientists advocate the need for exempting areas of very high susceptibility in the Western Ghats from any types of constructions
- while urging the government and the local communities to increase the vegetative cover as a first defence against the landslide.
- The relentless assault on its natural assets.
- Developmental activities have led to large scale deforestation and submergence of pristine forests.
- Conversion of forest land into agricultural land or for commercial purposes like tourism has resulted in shrinkage of the habitat.
- Climate change and Global warming have led to big variations in the duration and intensity of rainfalls in the region.
- This is giving rise to increased instances and intensity of extreme weather events in the region.
Way Ahead
- Sustainable Growth
- A balance between conservation efforts and development should be sought.
- Exempting areas of very high susceptibility from any types of constructions.
- Nature Based Solution
- Increasing the vegetative cover as a first line of defence during a natural calamity.
- Government Policies
- An intelligent public policy response is the need of the hour.
- Policies must adhere to the recommendations of reports In
- Avoiding mindless consumerism
- United Nations Development Programme, which had pioneered the human development approach,
- has proposed a Planetary Pressures Adjusted Human Development Index
- That weighs a country’s human development for its ecological footprint. Living in
- United Nations Development Programme, which had pioneered the human development approach,
- Awareness among various stakeholders
- Living in the Anthropocene, we need to guard against any further damage to the natural world.
Source: TH
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