Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Recognise the importance of forests

India is underestim­ating their role in mitigating the climate crisis

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Arecent report in this newspaper, based on an analysis by Vijay Ramesh, a doctoral student at Columbia University, shows that forest land nearly equal to the size of Nagaland has been approved for diversion between 2014 and 2020 or is pending approval for infrastruc­ture and developmen­tal projects. Based on government data, the study found out that the proportion of forest areas cleared since 2014 is over 68% of what was cleared between 1975 and 2014; before 2014, most of the forest diversion was related to encroachme­nts and mining while between 2014 and 2020, it has been mainly mining-led.

While there is little doubt that India needs natural resources for industrial growth and to pull people out of poverty, the State must also consider the ecosystem services that these forests provide to the country, and evaluate whether such large-scale diversion will be beneficial in the long-run. This lack of appreciati­on of the unseen benefits of forests is also the reason why biodiversi­ty-rich areas have been opened for mining, along with a strong push to rework the environmen­t impact assessment rules. India’s first-ever Assessment of Climate Change over the

Indian Region report revealed that the country’s average temperatur­e is expected to rise by 4.4 degree Celsius by end-2100; and warned that this would increase stress on ecosystems, farms, and freshwater resources. This, in turn, will have a serious impact on biodiversi­ty, food, water, energy security, and public health. The State needs to understand that forests can deliver economic benefits by mitigating the impacts of the climate crisis. Preserving forests is an effective method of building climate resilience, and realising India’s sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

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