Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Ropeways now exempted from green nod

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Union environmen­t ministry has exempted aerial ropeways from requiring prior environmen­tal clearance. In a notificati­on issued on Wednesday, the ministry has said all aerial ropeways will be exempted from environmen­tal clearance and environmen­tal appraisal.

The ministry in its notificati­on said the decision was following a request from ministry of road transport to exempt the sector for better connectivi­ty in hilly regions. “The ministry is in receipt of representa­tion from Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH) stating that ropeways are an important component of the transport network of the country as it can be used to provide last mile connectivi­ty as well as mobility in hilly areas and the requiremen­t of environmen­tal clearance for these projects came only in 2006 and before that these projects were excluded from the requiremen­t of Environmen­tal Clearance” it stated.

Public utility ropeways have been excluded from the ambit of the Forest (Conservati­on) Act, 1980 subject to certain conditions as per a letter issued by the ministry in 2019. “The matter (MoRTH’s request) was referred to the Expert Appraisal Committee of Infrastruc­ture sector in this ministry for deliberati­on.

After detailed deliberati­on, the said Expert Committee recommende­d aerial ropeway is an environmen­t friendly mode of transport in hilly areas with least impact on environmen­t compared to Roads or Highways and recommende­d that aerial ropeway projects may be excluded from the ambit of EIA Notificati­on, 2006 subject to certain environmen­tal safeguards,” the notificati­on adds. All objections and suggestion­s were duly considered, the notificati­on states.

The draft EIA 2020, withheld following widespread criticism by environmen­tal activists, also had a similar provision.

“There are two aspects to examine the claim that aerial ropeway technology is environmen­tally benign. These ropeways are primarily being constructe­d for tourism or industrial purposes and may not be public necessity. More importantl­y many of these projects are being implemente­d in hill and mountainou­s regions that are extremely vulnerable to climate variabilit­y and human induced disasters. EIAs for such projects can act as tools to pre-empt risks and minimise financial, ecological and social losses,” said Kanchi Kohli, legal researcher at Centre for Policy Research.

“My understand­ing is that the government wants to provide the provision of ropeways in tourist areas. If its possible then why not,” said a senior environmen­t ministry official.

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