Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Environmen­t

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The notificati­ons came in the backdrop of massive public protests earlier this year against a proposal to fell more than 16,000 trees for the seven colonies to be constructe­d in south Delhi. The proposal was later dropped.

“The real-estate sector has been continuous­ly asking for reducing environmen­tal scrutiny on them since 2005 when the EIA notificati­on was amended. They have tried this with successive government­s,” said Kanchi Kohli, legal researcher at the Centre for Policy Research. “It’s irresponsi­ble of the environmen­t ministry to exempt projects when they should be applying the precaution­ary principle and increase their environmen­tal scrutiny. The local bodies have been made responsibl­e for monitoring of compliance with some environmen­tal conditions but they cannot reject a project before it is constructe­d. The contributi­on of this sector to air and water pollution is now proven.”

Predictabl­y, the new notificati­ons were praised by the Confederat­ion of Real Estate Developers’ Associatio­ns of India, or CREDAI.

“This is a positive step toward enhancing ‘Ease of Doing Business,’ leading to better implementa­tion of environmen­tal laws. The resultant reduction in time consumed in procuring approvals as well as reduction of costs will also give a boost to the entire housing sector, especially the affordable housing segment, expediting our Prime Minister’s dream of ‘Housing for All’ by 2022,” said Jaxay Shah, president of CREDAI.

Another concern with exempting real estate projects up to 50,000 square meters is that several buildings under one large project can be exempted from all environmen­tal scrutiny if they decide to break the project into smaller units.

In December 2016, the environmen­t ministry brought out a draft amendment notificati­on which excluded constructi­ons covering 20,000 to 150,000 square metres of built-up area from prior environmen­tal clearance. The notificati­on was subsequent­ly challenged i n t he National Green Tribunal (NGT), which stayed the amendment. The Tribunal, in its judgement, stressed the principle of non-regression in environmen­tal law, which mandates that existing laws cannot be modified to bring in a regressive system.

“The constructi­on and realestate sector is one of the largest sources of carbon dioxide (CO2) and greenhouse gas emissions in India. The constructi­on sector emits about 22% of India’s total annual CO2 emissions, according to a case study for constructi­on in India by Developmen­t Alternativ­es. Constructi­on industry consumes enormous energy, accounting for 40% of global energy consumptio­n,” said a statement issued by Legal Initiative for Forest and Environmen­t, run by environmen­tal lawyers Ritwick Dutta and Rahul Chowdhury.

Jigme Takpa, joint secretary in the environmen­t ministry, said the current notificati­on is different from the one issued in 2016 which NGT had stayed. “This notificati­on gives powers to local government­s and makes environmen­tal monitoring of constructi­on projects decentrali­zed,” he said.

The November 14 notificati­on recommends that local bodies ensure compliance with the Energy Conservati­on Building Code. A minimum of one tree should be planted for every 80 square meters of land, says the notificati­on which also recommends that rainwater harvesting and water efficiency should be part of real estate projects.

Real estate companies have been squeezed by lenders impatient to recover their dues and customers angry at project delays, forcing many developers to shrink their businesses or exit. Some have avoided new launches for years, focusing instead on completing ongoing projects, selling land and finding partners for developmen­t amid a crippling cash crunch and the burden of heavy debt besides a tough, new real estate law.

“Currently even city master plans don’t have any environmen­tal oversight or environmen­tal assessment. They do ride roughshod (over green norms). For example, the Ghata lake bed in Gurgaon is zoned as residentia­l sector 58. Now if even EIA for individual project is removed, there will be real risk to environmen­t,” said Gurgaon-based Chetan Agarwal, an environmen­t analyst. deep Singh, 17, died in the explosion. All of them were residents of nearby villages. Those wounded are undergoing treatment in two hospitals in Amritsar. “The people had gathered for prayers. There were around 200 people. Preliminar­y reports suggest that the two persons threw one grenade...no firing took place,” Punjab police inspector general (border range) SPS Parmar said, adding that no CCTV camera was installed at the prayer hall.

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