Hindustan Times (Delhi)

NDMC to count vintage trees to keep track of green cover in central Delhi

- Ritam Halder ritam.halder@htlive.com

There is a necessity of having comprehens­ive informatio­n on the number, kind and health of trees on all avenue roads. Therefore, I am proposing trees census on all Avenue Roads in 201819 and digitise this data for better tree management.

NARESH KUMAR, Chairman, NDMC, in hi budget speech

NEWDELHI: The main roads of New Delhi — Janpath, Akbar Road and KG Marg — are lined with old trees such as neem, jamun, arjun, imli, pipal and amaltas, among others.

The New Delhi Municipal Council, now plans to conduct a census of these majestic trees.

“There is a necessity of having comprehens­ive informatio­n on the number, kind and health of trees on all avenue roads. Therefore, I am proposing trees census on all Avenue Roads in 2018-19 and digitise this data for better tree management,” NDMC chairman Naresh Kumar said, while reading out the council’s budget on Monday.

The civic body had last conducted a census of trees in 2005. While the database of trees in parks is regularly maintained, those on roads largely remain outside the monitoring net. According to Kumar, the census of trees on main roads will form the baseline database for New Delhi’s green cover which will help in scientific management of trees, including need to replace the old and diseased ones.

“The proposed tree census will capture scientific and popular names, girth at breast height, height, crown area, GPS location, and so on of such trees. A dedicated team will be constitute­d in NDMC to complete the task in 2018-19,” he said.

The NDMC area, a VIP zone in the city’s heart, is home to a mere 1.5% of the Capital’s 16.78 million people and covers just 3% of the city. But it has nearly 50% green cover of Delhi.

In recent years, residents of various localities have started counting trees of their respective neighbourh­oods. The first tree census of Delhi conducted privately by residents of Sarvodaya Enclave in 2011-12 marked the total number of trees, their species and their individual health — whether they had any disease, were infested by pests or were encroached upon. This was followed by other localities like Gulmohar Park, Jor Bagh and Vasant Vihar.

The Delhi government in October 2015 had announced the decision to conduct the Capital’s first-ever tree census by a “third party”, essentiall­y an NGO, to arrive at a figure of the number of trees in the city. This has yet to become a reality.

The New Delhi Municipal Council also has plans to conduct an audit of it’s yearly plantation drive. “In 2016-17, green survey audit was conducted through Indian Agricultur­e Research Institute, Delhi, which certified 72% survival rate of timber plants planted by the NDMC. Similar audit for the plantation drive conducted in 2017-18 will be completed by March, 2018 by the same institute,” Kumar said.

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