Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

All eligible mangroves to get ‘forest’ tag this year

- Prayag Arora-desai

MUMBAI: The state government is inching closer to declaring all eligible mangrove cover in Maharashtr­a legal ‘forest’ areas under the provisions of the Indian Forest Act, 1927.

While only around 19,000 hectares out of the total mangrove area of 32,000 hectares are eligible to be brought under the law, nearly 18,000 hectares of them have already been notified under section 4 of the Act as of May 31, data available with the forest department’s mangrove cell shows. Officials said the remaining mangrove cover would be notified within the calendar year. The ownership history of the land played a key role in determinin­g eligibilit­y under India’s forest Acts, and due to being under private ownership, around 13,000 hectares of mangroves in the state would not get additional protection under the Forest Conservati­on Act, officials said.

Virendra Tiwari, additional principal chief conservato­r of forests (mangrove cell), said, “Any mangrove cover on privately owned land cannot be declared a reserve forest. But they are neverthele­ss covered under the Environmen­t Protection Act, as per the Coastal Regulation Zone [CRZ] rules. So, while it won’t require forest clearance to divert the land, there is still a layer of protection. Besides, the Bombay high court has to give permission for diversion of mangroves as well.”

This means once designated a legal ‘forest’, project proponents must seek mandatory forest clearance from the forest department, in addition to the Bombay HC’S permission and the CRZ clearance to divert the land for any non-forestry purpose. On mangrove land that is not legally a forest, this responsibi­lity lies with the land-owning agencies, either urban local bodies or special purpose vehicles.

After the fresh notificati­on of around 1,019 hectares of mangroves in Raigad and Thane districts on May 12 - a copy of the notificati­on was accessed by Hindustan Times this week Maharashtr­a has now brought a total of 17,974.5 hectares under the Act’s purview. Additional­ly, 11,548 hectares have been notified under section 20 of the Act, indicating that any third-party claims over the land have been settled after ground-truthing and inquiries by forest survey officers. Another 2,846 hectares have been proposed for deletion from section 20 after inquiries, while about 3,579 hectares are still under inquiry, data shows.

“Only a small portion of around 1,200 hectares or so is awaiting notificati­on under section 4 of the Act, and we hope to complete this within this year,” Tiwari said.

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