Deccan Chronicle

Environmen­t ministry gets `3,100 cr in ‘20-21

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New Delhi, Feb 1 : The Centre on Saturday increased the budgetary allocation for the environmen­t ministry from last fiscal by nearly five per cent for 2020-21 with no change in the amount allotted to pollution abatement and climate change action plan.

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, allocated `3100 crore for the ministry out of which

`460 crore were allotted to control pollution, which is the same as the money it received in the last budget. Control of Pollution has been conceptual­ized to provide financial assistance to Pollution control Boards/Committees and funding to National Clean Air Programme (NCAP). Similarly, budget for pollution abatement, which was cut by 50 per cent last year from 2018-19, remained unchanged at

`10 crore.

The minister also announced that states, which are formulatin­g and implementi­ng plans for ensuring cleaner air in cities above one million population should be encouraged.

“Parameters for the incentives to be notified by the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forests and Climate change and the allocation for this purpose is `4,400 crore for

2020-21,” Sitharaman said. However, a top official from the environmen­t ministry said this amount has not reflected in the budget yet.

For Climate Change Action Plan, an amount of

`40 crore has been allocated, which is the same as last fiscal. The budgetary allocation for National Mission for Green India has been raised from `240 crore in the last financial year to `311 crore this time with national afforestat­ion programme alone being allotted `246 crore, higher than last year’s amount of `179 crore. In wildlife arena, the government-initiated projects -- Project Tiger and Project Elephant -saw some changes with the former getting reduced by `50 crore and the other being raised by

`5 crore.

The fiscal’s allocation of

`350 crore for Project Tiger, an initiative for conserving the wildcat, reduced to `300 crore and

`30 crore for Project Elephant, which was launched to conserve jumbos across the country, is now `35 crore.

The budget for National Tiger Conservati­on Authority (NTCA), a statutory body under the ministry responsibl­e for tiger census and conservati­on of wild cats, saw a minor raise of `50 lakh from `10 crore last year to 10.5 crore for

2020-21.

The budget for National Coastal Mission was also raised slightly with the government allotting it

`103 crore this year, compared to `95 crore in the last fiscal.

Under the National Coastal Mission, the environmen­t ministry is responsibl­e to ensure livelihood security of coastal communitie­s including fisher folks, to conserve, protect the coastal stretches and to promote sustainabl­e developmen­t based on scientific principles.

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