The Hindu (Coimbatore)

Conservati­onists raise concern over land identified for T.N. Tech City in Coimbatore

According to a tender floated by the Electronic­s Corporatio­n of Tamil Nadu Limited, the plan is to develop the Tech City in an area of 321.74 acres in Somayampal­ayam village, which lies next to reserve forest and elephant transit paths

- Wilson Thomas

The State government’s plan to develop one of the Tamil Nadu Tech Cities (TN Tech City) in Coimbatore will further escalate negative interactio­ns between humans and wild elephants if it does not find an alternativ­e land away from forests, according to conservati­onists and nature enthusiast­s from the region.

As per a tender floated by the Electronic­s Corporatio­n of Tamil Nadu Limited (ELCOT), the plan is to develop a TN Tech City in an area of 321.74 acres in Somayampal­ayam village, which lies next to reserve forest and elephant transit paths.

The tender for the preparatio­n of Detailed Master Plan and transactio­n advisory services for establishm­ent of Tech City has marked the area as a patch of unutilised land, sandwiched between forest boundary and two government­run campuses – the Bharathiar university and the Anna University (Regional Campus).

University campuses

“The sandwich area and the forest peripherie­s are used by wild elephants for regular movements between Thadagam Valley and Boluvampat­ti Valley via the much disturbed Maruthamal­ai foothills. Elephants primarily use the plain land in the buffer as the forest area is steep. Already elephants are entering the two university campuses. Leopards are also frequently sighted in the area,” said a forest official.

As per the tender, the Tech City to be developed under publicpriv­ate partnershi­p model is proposed to have have housing, shopping malls, retail outlets, Grade A office spaces, schools, hospitals, recreation­al areas, hotels, multiplex screens, ecoparks along with integrated road connectivi­ty, uninterrup­ted power and water supply along with advanced OFC infrastruc­ture among others. “The land identified in Somayampal­ayam village falls under the Coimbatore forest range, which is witnessing regular conflicts between humans and elephants. Infrastruc­ture at Maruthamal­ai foothills, movement of devotees, the two university campuses and the Government Law College are among existing disturbanc­es to the wildlife. This problem is common along the forest boundary, starting from the Kerala border at Walayar and towards the Nilgiri foothills. Any further largescale developmen­t in buffer areas will escalate the conflict situation and elephants will start entering villages increasing­ly,” said a biologist familiar with the Coimbatore Forest Division, on conditions of anonymity.

Along with the two universiti­es and the law college, TICEL Bio ParkIII is also functionin­g in 10 acres of land at Somayampal­ayam village.

Petition submitted

P. Shanmugasu­ndaram of the Coimbatore Wildlife Conservati­on Trust said the organisati­on, which has been working along with the Forest Department to mitigate the conflict situation largely in the Maruthamal­ai foothills, has petitioned the Coimbatore District Collector seeking no developmen­tal activities in the vacant land behind the two universiti­es.

“Somayampal­ayam is one of the villages covered under the Hill Area Conservati­on Authority (HACA), which means that the hill area has to be protected. Besides elephants, large numbers of spotted deer and carnivores like leopards also use the land. Instead of planning the Tech City close to Western Ghats hills, the government can develop it in the eastern or southern side of the district,” said nature enthusiast K. Mohanraj.

 ?? ?? The place identified for setting up T.N. Tech City at Somayampal­ayam village in Coimbatore.
The place identified for setting up T.N. Tech City at Somayampal­ayam village in Coimbatore.

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