Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Centre exempts highways in border areas from obtaining green clearance

- Jayashree Nandi letters@ hindustant­imes. com

The Union environmen­t ministry notified on July 14 amendments that exempt highways in border areas, power plants using biomass, enhancemen­t in the fish handling capacity of ports, and expansion of airport terminals from obtaining prior environmen­t clearances, changing the environmen­tal impact assessment policy in place since 2006.

A draft notificati­on was released in April but despite opposition from environmen­talists, ministry officials said they had not received any major objections to these changes.

“We received hardly any objections to these amendments. People had ample time to read every amendment because the draft notificati­on was issued in April. After scrutinisi­ng the comments, we have issued the final notificati­on,” said a senior environmen­t ministry official who asked not to be named. A period of 60 days was given for people to submit their objections and comments to the draft.

Under the new policy, developers of highways in border

At a Char Dham road widening project site in Uttarakhan­d.

areas will only have to ensure self-compliance of a Standard Operating Procedure notified by the Centre from time to time.

With the new policy coming into effect, some high-altitude stretches of the Char Dham road project in Uttarakhan­d and other highway projects in the western and eastern Himalayas and several parts of northeast India will no longer need environmen­tal appraisal because they fall within 100km of a border or the Line of Control (LoC).

“The highway projects related to defence and strategic importance in border states are sensitive in nature and in many cases need to be executed on priority keeping in view strategic, defence and security considerat­ions and in this regard, the central government deems it necessary to exempt such projects from the requiremen­t of environmen­tal clearance in the border areas,” the final notificati­on issued on July 14 said.

The high-powered committee (HPC) that looked into the Char Dham project, in its final report submitted in July 2020 unanimousl­y recommende­d that an environmen­t impact assessment be conducted before road widening in the Bhagirathi eco-sensitive zone stretch was taken up.

With the final notificati­on on exempting border roads from prior environmen­tal clearance being issued, environmen­talists are concerned the environmen­tal impact assessment for the Bhagirathi zone may also be skipped now.

“If the government skips this, then we stand to lose the only pristine stretch of the Ganga left in the country. The Bhagirathi watershed just like Alaknanda, Mandakini and Yamuna basins will be irreparabl­y destroyed by muck and debris from this project. Nobody is or has been against road widening of feeder roads but oblivious to the growing impact of climate change and the precarious nature of Himalayas, building an excessivel­y wide 12-metre feeder road, even when the border road is only 7m, is irrational and suicidal,” said Mallika Bhanot, member of Uttarakhan­d-based Ganga Ahvaan, an environmen­tal group.

In December 2012, the environmen­t ministry notified 4,179.59 sqkm covering the entire watershed of about 100 kmh from Gaumukh to Uttarkashi as the Bhagirathi Eco Sensitive Zone (BESZ).

Over 98 % of the entire BESZ area is reserved forest . Almost 59% of the total BESZ area is glacier or snow covered according to the high powered committee report.

On December 14 last year, the Supreme Court permitted the Union government to construct all-weather roads with 10m width as part of its Char Dham project in Uttarakhan­d, underlinin­g that “the recent past has thrown up serious challenges to national security”, and that wide strategic feeder roads to Indo-China border areas were required for the infrastruc­tural needs of the armed forces.

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