The Free Press Journal

Jungle raj is literally here

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After cashing in on the coastline by diluting the Coastal Regulation Zone, the Union government is now about to do the same thing with forests. On October 2, it released a consultati­on paper on amending the flagship Forest Conservati­on Act (FCA), 1980. Prima facie, the amendments seek to incorporat­e changes in India’s ‘ecological, social, and environmen­tal regimes’ over the last 40 years. But a closer reading reveals that they also facilitate private plantation­s and the extraction of oil and natural gas from forests. The fear is that this will lead to vast stretches bordering forests becoming market commoditie­s as well as tradable assets. States have been told to respond to the consultati­on paper in 15 days and the document is open to public comment till October 17.

The road to hell is paved with good intentions. The amendments seek to rectify the complicati­ons caused by the Supreme Court judgment dated December 12, 1996, in the T N Godavarman Thirumulpa­d versus Union of India and Others case. Until this case, provisions of the FCA applied only to the forests notified under the Indian Forest Act, 1927 or any other local law, and to those managed by the forest department. But after the judgment, all areas that conformed to the ‘dictionary’ meaning of ‘forest’ were ordered to be also considered as forests. Since identifica­tion of such land is subjective and arbitrary to some extent, the consultati­on paper says it leads to the tendency to keep most of the private lands devoid of vegetation. The win-win solution it proposes is to allow extensive plantation­s in all possible available lands outside the government forests which will also meet India’s nationally determined contributi­ons under the Paris Agreement to create a carbon sink expansion of additional (cumulative) 2.5–3 billion tonnes through additional forest and tree cover by 2030. To ease the grievances of individual­s whose lands fall in statespeci­fic private forests acts or within the purview of the dictionary meaning of forest, the ministry has proposed to allow them the right to construct structures for bona fide purposes, including forest protection measures and residentia­l units up to an area of 250 sq m as one-time relaxation.

The consultati­on paper also proposes to facilitate new technologi­es such as extended-reach drilling (ERD) for extraction of oil and natural gas found deep beneath the forest land by drilling holes from outside the forest areas. The paper suggests that this will not impact the soil or aquifer that supports the forest.

If the intentions of the government are honourable, why is the amendment sought to be rammed through like the farm laws? Fifteen days is too little time to analyse the issue and draft a considered response to the consultati­on paper. Translatio­ns of the consultati­on paper have not been provided, as is required for a democratic approach. The paper also makes no mention of existing laws such as the Forest Rights Act and the Biodiversi­ty Act, which are crucial to any discussion on forests. Anyway, the prospect of legalising logging at the edge of the forest is fraught with the danger of misuse. As it is, sandalwood is smuggled out of forests in large quantities. Finally, commercial tree plantation­s are much poorer than natural forests when it comes to storing carbon. With these amendments, the environmen­t ministry claims that it aims to unlock land for infrastruc­ture developmen­t and plantation­s, both of which are high on economic priorities. The presumptio­n is that private land, once released from the requiremen­t of prior forest clearances, will incentivis­e plantation-based carbon sinks. In reality, these lands could well become market commoditie­s and tradable assets both for private parties to sell, and government to acquire on behalf of private parties. And the unseemly haste to push commercial forestry only justifies the fears that the government is facilitati­ng the takeover of forest land by corporates.

There are misgiving on the infrastruc­ture side too. The requiremen­ts of government agencies like the NHAI and railways are to be prioritise­d. It assumes that land once acquired by these agencies should be allowed for unencumber­ed use. The paper also asks whether the use of forest land for strategic and security projects of national importance should be exempted from the need to obtain prior approval from the Central government, as doing this will allow states to permit diversion of forest land for strategic and security projects that are to be completed in a given time frame.

It must be mentioned that in March 2019, the same ministry had circulated a draft amendment to the Indian Forest Act, 1927. Under its terms, forest staff could shoot anyone in the name of forest protection with little threat of criminal action. They could even terminate the forest rights of any forestdwel­lers by paying them a paltry compensati­on. Forest officials could also raid and arrest without warrants and confiscate the property of any forest-dweller. If the forest department accused anyone of possessing any illegal objects, the accused would have to prove their innocence, not the accuser. Mercifully, public outcry forced the government to drop the move. It is not as if the previous regime was any different. The way the UPA government removed large chunks of land from the eco-sensitive zone of the Western Ghats was shameful.

Finally, as the consultati­on paper was released on Gandhi Jayanti, one cannot help quoting him: “The world has enough for everyone’s need but not enough for everyone’s greed.”

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