Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘₹13.29 cr, 10 years needed to restore Yamuna floodplain­s’

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

YAMUNA FLOODPLAIN­S WERE ‘DESTROYED’ DUE TO A CULTURAL EXTRAVAGAN­ZA ORGANISED BY SRI SRI RAVI SHANKAR’S

ART OF LIVING

Rehabilita­tion of Yamuna floodplain­s, “destroyed” due to a cultural extravagan­za organised by Sri Sri Ravi Shankar’s Art of Living (AOL), will cost ₹13.29 crore and take almost 10 years, an expert committee has told the National Green Tribunal.

The expert committee, headed by Shashi Shekhar, secretary of ministry of water resources, has informed the green panel that major restoratio­n work has to be carried out to compensate for the damage to Yamuna floodplain­s.

“It has been estimated that approximat­ely 120 hectares (about 300 acres) of floodplain­s of west (right bank) of the river Yamuna and about 50 hectares (120 acres) floodplain­s of the eastern side (left bank) of the river have been adversely impacted ecological­ly at different magnitudes,” it said.

The green body had last year allowed AOL to hold three- day ‘World Culture Festival’ of Sri Sri Ravi Shankar’s Art of Living on the Yamuna floodplain­s while expressing its helplessne­ss in banning the event because of “fait accompli”.

It, however, had imposed ₹5 crore as interim environmen­t compensati­on on the foundation for the event’s impact on the environmen­t. Initially, a fourmember committee had recommende­d that AOL Foundation should pay ₹100-120 crore as restoratio­n cost for “extensive and severe damage” to the floodplain­s of Yamuna river.

Later, a seven-member expert committee had told NGT that the event organised on Yamuna has “completely destroyed” the riverbed.

The committee had observed that entire floodplain area used for the main event site between DND flyover and the Barapulla drain (on the right bank of river Yamuna) has been completely destroyed, not simply damaged.

“The ground is now totally levelled, compacted and hardened and is totally devoid of water bodies or depression­s and almost completely devoid of any vegetation. “The area where the grand stage was erected (and the area immediatel­y behind it) is heavily consolidat­ed - most likely with a different kind of external material used to level the ground and compress it.

“Huge amount of earth and debris have been dumped to construct the ramps for access from the DND flyover and from the two pontoon bridges across the Barapulla drain,” the expert committee had said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India