Environment ministry gets `3,100 cr in ’20-21
WORST FIVE BEST FIVE MAJOR STATES
Chhattisgarh 2,55,45,000 Gujarat 60,44,000
Bihar 19,27,759 Madhya Pradesh 11,34,796
Manipur 14,28,000
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
Tripura 70,653 Uttarakhand 90,864 Puducherry 13,86,66
Tamil Nadu 1,45,457 Punjab 1,52,434 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,
West Bengal 6,25,178 Uttar Pradesh 5,58,134 Kerala 4,57,616
Andhra Pradesh 3,20,693 Telangana 2,31,539 Karnataka 2,02,301 Maharashtra 1,67,973 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.