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JICA to give Rs 920 crore for forest greening projects

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CHENNAI: As part of climate change mitigation project and Tamil Nadu Biodiversi­ty Greening Project, Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) will be funding 61 Tamil Nadu Biodiversi­ty greening projects (TBGPs), reliable sources in the Forest Department said.

According to Forest Department sources, the project will begin this year and continue for a period of six years till 2026. A principal amount of Rs 920.56 crores has been sanctioned.

All conservati­on projects and tree sapling projects will start by October when the monsoon sets in so that the mortality rate of the saplings planted under various schemes is reduced. At the same time, the state had also envisaged a policy to promote tree cultivatio­n on private lands.

The Forest Department had also identified Jawadhu Hills, Shervaroya­n Hills, Kolli Hills, Pachamalai Hills and Chitheri Hills to grow traditiona­l sandalwood trees. The scheme of raising sandal plantation­s in reserve forests has already started and will continue till 2025. The 10-year ongoing project will be funded through a corpus of Rs 100 crore, Forest Department sources said.

JICA has chosen TN as one of the preferred states in the country to continue conservati­on programmes and under the first phase of TBGP, JICA has spent around Rs 500 crore from 2011 to 2019, informed official sources said. The state will also continue the ongoing schemes of raising teak plantation­s, over an area of 6,000 hectares and this project has already commenced. An extent of 4,745 ha (9,49,000 seedlings) has been planted till 2020- 2021 at a total cost of Rs 24.05 crore, an official pointed out.

“One of the long pending demands of the conservati­onists is to weed out invasive species like wattle, lantana camara and prosopis julifora and there is a need for massive funding for this project,” observed wildlife enthusiast N Balaji, who regularly participat­es in the annual wildlife census.

The Forest Department had also identified Jawadhu Hills, Shervaroya­n Hills, Kolli Hills, Pachamalai Hills and Chitheri Hills to grow traditiona­l sandalwood trees

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