Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Despite flak, Centre firm on forest policy

- Malavika Vyawahare malavika.vyawahare@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Even as environmen­talists in Delhi protest the felling of old-growth trees for redevelopm­ent projects, the central government is preparing to finalise a new forest policy, the draft of which has drawn criticism for its focus on planting trees rather than conserving forests and ecosystems. The policy mooted by the Union environmen­t ministry is an important document because the country’s forests face immense pressure — not just from forest-dependent communitie­s, but also from industrial and developmen­tal projects that require clearing of forest land.

As per official data, the environmen­t ministry rejected only 7% of the proposals for forest land diversion it received in 2016.

In March, the central government released a policy draft that proposes to replace the National Forest Policy, 1988, and was open for comments until April 14. The environmen­t ministry received over 700 comments. “The new policy will be finalised within two months,” Siddhanta Das, director general of forests, said.

A large chunk of the feedback centred on the involvemen­t of the private sector in managing forests within forest land.

The draft calls for public-private partnershi­ps to undertake afforestat­ion in degraded forest areas, and even in open forests, where the tree canopy density is between 10% and 40%.

“There are some misconcept­ions, we will clarify some provisions in the final version,” Das said. Allowing private-sector participat­ion in plantation­s on forest land will “help to increase green cover in waste lands, in degraded forest lands and help to make open forests more dense,” Das said, but ruled out the possibilit­y of the controvers­ial policy guidelines being dropped.

Environmen­talists fear that this not just means clearing forests for commercial purposes but the commercial­isation of the forest resources itself.

The draft put forward signified a major departure from the existing policy, which encourages use of wood substitute­s to reduce pressure on the forests.

The draft policy talks of ensuring self-sufficienc­y in timber production with an emphasis on the idea that “wood is good,” encouragin­g its use in everything from constructi­on to making furniture. There are no carbon emissions released in producing this raw material unlike steel or plastic, backers argue.

The biennial State of Forest report 2017 released by the Forest Survey of India in February showed the country registered a marginal increase (0.94%) in forest cover since the last assessment in 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India