Millennium Post

DELUGE IN THE LAND OF COFFEE

Respecting the environmen­t is crucial to rebuilding a safe Kodagu

- SIBI ARASU

Heavy, incessant rainfall is a fact of life for the people of Kodagu (the erstwhile Coorg district) in Karnataka. “For the old-timers here in Coorg, the last few months of rain was nothing new. None of us were really expecting such incredible damage to happen though,” said Pavita Subbaiah, a resident of Madikeri. Subbaiah and her husband had shifted back to Kodagu five years ago after he had retired from his job at Bengaluru. She added, “Everyone thinks the reason for all this damage and loss of

life is the buildings that have come up everywhere and the constant use of earthmover­s and drillers. A fragile region

like ours just cannot take that much pressure.”

The district of Kodagu is indeed used to heavy rains, especially when the Southwest monsoons traverses it during its journey across the Indian subcontine­nt. Thus, when heavy rains battered the region in June this year and continued over

the next few months, there was an apprehensi­on about loss of good coffee crop (Karnataka grows more than 50 per cent of India’s coffee) but no one was thinking of extensive damage, lesser still about entire villages being consumed by landslides. It was the mid-august rains that began on Independen­ce Day, August 15, and continued unabated till August 17, that broke the levee, quite literally.

Over the course of three days, August 15, 16, and 17, Kodagu received 768 mm of rainfall. This is almost half of the entire rainfall received in August, which was 1,675 mm. The rainfall recorded in August 2018 broke all records in living memory -- it was back in 1931 that Kodagu had last received such heavy rainfall. Even then, August 1931 had recorded 1,559 mm of rainfall. The fact that this time most of the rain fell over a period of 72 hours made things worse.

The higher altitude towns and villages in the region just couldn’t handle the rains. A third of all the panchayats in

Kodagu were critically affected. At least 14 people were reported dead, more than 5,000 people were in rescue camps in the first few days after the rains, crop damages alone was estimated to be more than Rs 3 billion (Rs 300 crore). A few villages in the worst-affected municipali­ties, Kushalnaga­r and Madikeri, have been completely submerged by landslides with no traces left of homes or farmland.

Kodagu is a region most famous for its coffee beans, martial prowess and, of course, for being the birthplace of the Cauvery -- the river that is the

lifeline for millions of farmers in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. The district varies in altitude from 390 metres above mean sea level (MSL) up to 1,750 metres above MSL. Over the

last decade or so, Kodagu has also seen a great inflow of tourists, with city slickers from Bengaluru and other urban centres driving down for weekend holidays. The number of homestays in Kodagu has mushroomed to keep up with the tourists and,

as of now, every other coffee estate in the region doubles up as a homestay.

A senior forest official in Karnataka who declined to be named said that excessive tourism is detrimenta­l to the environmen­t but also argued that other underlying factors are not even discussed.

“In line with the global trend of deforestat­ion and forest degradatio­n, much forest area (mostly government lands) came under coffee cultivatio­n in the last three decades in Kodagu,” he said. “The governance was under tremendous pressure to facilitate developmen­t. There was no stopping this trend as the priority of governance was not in regulating and containing encroachme­nts or unbridled developmen­t but to regularise and promote it.”

The official added, “Since coffee cultivatio­n is under the shade of trees, deforestat­ion was

less visible to satellite imagery and less visually arresting. The

landslides have primarily happened in the revenue villages of Mukkodlu, Galibeedu, Kalur, Monnangeri, and Madapur. These are some of the areas that have been recently deforested. Deforestat­ion in Kodagu is cryptic and happens below the radar. The landscape remains green and the canopy cover shows little change, but the land below changes significan­tly.”

According to the Coffee Board of India, Kodagu accounts for 107,089 hectares of the 2,44,785 hectares of coffee plantation­s in Karnataka, the state which accounts for over 53 per cent of India’s coffee production. Thus, if this deforestat­ion is a reality, it is happening at an overwhelmi­ng scale.

All the talk and focus in Kodagu right now is about getting the district back on its feet. The region is still reeling from the disaster with 25 relief camps acting as temporary homes to about 3,000 victims. At least five people are missing and the search is still on for them. The state electricit­y board is trying to get their services up and running but heavy landslides and damage to arterial roads is proving to be a major impediment.

As Kodagu recovers, there is talk about reviving the recommenda­tions made by committees such as the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (popu

larly known as the Gadgil committee report). The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has directed the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forests and Climate Change (MOEFCC) not to reduce the eco-sensitive area (ESA) of Western Ghats further from the proposed 56,825 sq kms and to notify the same within six months.

These are signs of acknowledg­ing that anthropoge­nic activities should be reduced in regions such as Kodagu. Whether this will translate effectivel­y on the ground is still questionab­le. IANS

(In arrangemen­t with

Mongabay.com, a source for environmen­tal news reporting and analysis. The views expressed are those

of Mongabay.com)

Kodagu is used to heavy rains, especially when the Southwest monsoons traverses it. Thus, when heavy rains battered the region in June this year and continued over the next few months, there was apprehensi­on about loss of good coffee crop but no one had foreseen the extensive damage

 ??  ?? Mushroomin­g buildings and the constant use of earthmover­s and drillers are the reason for the damage and loss in Kodagu in the recent floods
Mushroomin­g buildings and the constant use of earthmover­s and drillers are the reason for the damage and loss in Kodagu in the recent floods
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