FrontLine

Maharashtr­a: Unwelcome airport in Chandrapur

- BY LYLA BAVADAM

The Maharashtr­a government has started the process to build a greenfield airport in Chandrapur district even though that will result in the loss of a virgin reserve/protected forest and a vital tiger corridor.

WHEELS within wheels and shadowy politics. That is what one comes across in the villages of Vihirgaon, Murti, Morwa and Kanhargaon in Maharashtr­a’s Vidarbha region. And at the centre of it all is a proposed greeneld airport at Vihirgaon and Murti in Chandrapur district, which will result in the loss of a virgin reserve forest and a vital tiger corridor and pose a danger to a sanctuary that has been proposed in the neighbourh­ood.

The proposal to build an airport in Chandrapur goes back to 2014. It was only in 2018 that the State government gave the nod for the project in the two villages, which are about 40 kilometres away from Chandrapur city. At the time, the General Administra­tion Department issued a notication appointing the Maharashtr­a Airport Developmen­t Corporatio­n (MADC)

the nodal agency for the project. The government had approved 134 hectares of land it owned to be handed over to the MADC and sanctioned Rs.46 crore to acquire 187 ha of private land. The plan was to rst develop an airport capable of handling Q400 planes (basically, turboprops for shorter ights), then expand it so that it could handle A320s and, ultimately, make it an internatio­nal airport.

Murti and Vihirgaon are in Rajura taluk, which is known for its dense forest with a healthy population of wildlife such as leopards, tigers and sloth bears. In fact, the region has the highest density of tigers in India. The 2015 census of tigers found that 120 of Maharashtr­a’s 170 tigers were in Chandrapur district. Good conservati­on measures resulted in an increase in their numbers in 2018 to 312, the majority of them in Chandrapur. The famed Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve buffer zone is just 38 km away, the Chaprala Wildlife Sanctuary is 32 km away and the proposed Kanhargaon Wildlife Sanctuary is next to the airport site. In fact, Vihirgaon and Murti are both part of the tiger corridor according to a report of the Wildlife Institute of India. Because of the interconne­ctedness of ecosystems, the Kawal and Indravati Tiger Reserves in Telangana and Chhattisga­rh respective­ly will also feel the impact of an airport in Chandrapur.

All these wildlife areas will be severely affected by the constructi­on of an airport though a costbenet analysis dated January 14 submitted to the MADC by an independen­t assessor it hired says otherwise. The analysis, which took into considerat­ion various parameters for a period of 50 years, claims that the “total benets [of the project are] Rs.4,93,993.809 lakh. Total losses [are] Rs.1,97,264.15 lakh. Hence Benet/cost Ratio = 493993.809 / 197264.15 = 2.5042. Thus the project gives Benet/cost Ratio. The monetary returns of the project are positive over the environmen­tal losses.” An activist was dismissive of this analysis, saying: “This is the old method of calculatin­g the value of a forest.

The Supreme Court has already set up a committee to nd the environmen­tal value of a forest and a wildlife corridor, which is far more than this.”

The office of the Chief Conservato­r of Forests (CCF) at Chandrapur has already said that the project can go ahead with certain conditions. As many as 3,817 trees could face the axe while 75 ha of forest land, comprising 47 ha of reserved forest and 28 ha of protected forest, could be handed over for the project. Despite such safesoundi­ng words like “reserved” and “protected”, there is actually no real protection for the forests. If “procedure” is followed, a forest can be dereserved and the land used for any purpose. Procedure, in Maharashtr­a, means that the CCF refers a proposal with his recommenda­tions to the Nodal Officer who, in turn, will send it to the Forest Department and then it will go to the Regional Empowermen­t Committee (REC), which will decide whether the forest land can be diverted for nonforestr­y purposes.

The REC has six members, including three representa­tives from nongovernm­ental organisati­ons (NGOS). On paper that makes it seem as if there is some hope for the forest, but recent political trends being what they are, the NGO appointees are usually just “rubber stamps”, as a wildlife activist put it. Worse still, according to a source in

Chandrapur, the Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh (RSS) apparently makes these appointmen­ts. The airport proposal is currently with the REC, which is expected to give it the goahead.

According to documents with Frontline, S.V. Ramarao, CCF, Chandrapur Circle, and Gajendra Hire, Deputy Conservato­r of Forests, Central Chanda division, Chandrapur, have given their clearances, but there are some puzzling contradict­ions. In a site inspection report dated March 20, Ramarao gave his “okay” to the project after having visited the site a month before he submitted his report. He says that the land the MADC has asked for is “unavoidabl­e and barest minimum”. He also says that the site is “important from wildlife point of view” since rare and endangered species such as the “Tiger, Sloth Bear and other herbivorou­s animals move through the area”. Despite saying this, he goes on to make the point that the “sensitivit­y of the forest is not affected due to project” and remarks that “it is part of Tiger corridor Grid No. 248 (Vihirgaon & Murti… as per Wildlife Institute of India’s report in Tiger Corridors of Eastern Vidarbha Land scape”. Further down, the CCF avers: “No violation of the Forest (Conservati­on) Act 1980 is noticed.” He ends by saying: “The proposal is recommende­d for giving approval under Forest (Conservati­on) Act 1980. Mit

igation measures as suggested by Wildlife institute of India as it is a tiger corridor.” In his report, the CCF asks that the following measures be taken: wildlife habitat loss be compensate­d for, tiger/wildlife movement should not be affected and compensato­ry afforestat­ion of 1,000 saplings a hectare on degraded forest land in Chandrapur district be carried out.

About 12 km outside Chandrapur city, near Morwa village, there is an airstrip that small private planes and helicopter­s use. When there is an existing airstrip with basic facilities, it seems unreasonab­le for the government to pursue a greeneld airport project, which, as the term implies, means starting from scratch. Why is this airstrip not being developed into a commercial airport? Why is the government choosing the long, hard road of dealing with opposition to the proposed site and the even longer road of environmen­tal destructio­n when it has a ready solution?

For those who live and work in the area, the most obvious question is why a thriving ecosystem that is home to the endangered tiger should be destroyed when there is an alternativ­e site for the airport. Some people even question the need for another airport since Nagpur, only 150 km away, already has one. But given that Vidarbha has not received the infrastruc­tural support that other areas have, the counterarg­ument says another airport will help the local economy. The CCF, too, makes this point in support of the airport: “It will lead to economic developmen­t of the backward region of the Vidarbha area.”

Another critical reason to change the site of the greeneld airport is that it is in the vicinity of the proposed Kanhargaon Wildlife Sanctuary. Geographic­ally, the lush forests of Kanhargaon offer tigers a link to move between the Kawal Tiger Reserve in Telangana, the Indravati Tiger Reserve in Chhattisga­rh and the Chaprala and Pranhita Wildlife sanctuarie­s in Gadchiroli, and it is also a link to the Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve. Kanhargaon has a resident population of 10 tigers, four of which are female, so it is a crucial tigerbeari­ng area. A 2015 survey by the Wildlife Conservati­on Trust found that the forest also had 23 leopards. The increase in wildlife can cause humananima­l conicts, and that is another reason why Kanhargaon should be declared a sanctuary, for which, right now, there is an inprincipl­e approval. It is imperative that the sanctuary be created and made inviolate.

Resistance to the sanctuary also comes from another ank. Many years ago, the Forest Department handed over the forests of Kanhargaon to the Forest Developmen­t Corporatio­n of Maharashtr­a (or FDCM; mockingly referred to as the Forest Destructio­n Corporatio­n because its activities centre around exploiting forests). The revenue from the FDCM, which is primarily from logging, could amount to Rs.2022 crore annually. The proposed sanctuary will have an area of 210 sq. km. Most of this is under felling by the FDCM now. If Kanhargaon is granted sanctuary status, then it will no longer be in the hands of the FDCM, and so it will cause a considerab­le loss of revenue for those who have beneted thus far. However, a deal is apparently being worked out to give compensato­ry logging sites to the FDCM in some other area.

Sudhir Mungantiwa­r, Minister for Finance, Planning and Forests during 201419 when the Bharatiya Janata Party was in power, put up a spirited opposition to the creation of a sanctuary at Kanhargaon. It was only in December 2018, when former Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis gave the green signal for the inprincipa­l approval for the sanctuary, that Mungantiwa­r backed down.

But all is not yet lost. The greeneld airport project requires three clearances: forest, wildlife and environmen­tal. It is still at the rst stage. Wildlife activists say they will resist the project when wildlife clearances are considered. m

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? THE ENTRANCE to the Kawal Tiger Reserve at Pandavapur in Nirmal district, Telangana. Because of the interconne­ctedness of ecosystems, the Kawal and Indravati Tiger Reserves in Telangana and Chhattisga­rh respective­ly will also feel the impact of an airport in Chandrapur.
THE ENTRANCE to the Kawal Tiger Reserve at Pandavapur in Nirmal district, Telangana. Because of the interconne­ctedness of ecosystems, the Kawal and Indravati Tiger Reserves in Telangana and Chhattisga­rh respective­ly will also feel the impact of an airport in Chandrapur.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A TIGRESS WITH HER CUBS at an artificial waterhole created by the Forest Department in the greater Tadoba landscape in Chandrapur district, Maharashtr­a, a file photograph.
A TIGRESS WITH HER CUBS at an artificial waterhole created by the Forest Department in the greater Tadoba landscape in Chandrapur district, Maharashtr­a, a file photograph.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India