The Star Late Edition

New city forests could ‘do more harm than good’

-

A PLAN to create urban forests in India would help mitigate the effects of climate change in its polluted cities, but could lead to evictions and result in plantation­s that harm the environmen­t, planning experts said yesterday.

The 200 urban forests would be developed over the next five years on forest land or “other vacant land” in cities, Environmen­t Minister Prakash Javadekar said last week.

“Urban areas have gardens but very rarely forests... these forests will work as lungs of the cities.”

But open spaces in Indian cities are highly contested, with mounting pressure to convert parks into parking lots, and build on flood plains, said Kanchi Kohli, a researcher at the Centre for Policy Research, a think tank in Delhi.

“There is often a serious disconnect between land records and present-day land use. In government records, slums could be listed as being on ‘vacant’ or ‘forest’ land, for example,” she said.

“All these areas can potentiall­y be under the urban forest scheme, and slum dwellers could be displaced.”

Of the nearly 800 land conflicts in India, more than two-thirds relate to common lands, including forests and grazing grounds, according to the Land Conflict Watch database.

Indian cities are losing green spaces quickly as land is required to build offices and flats for an expanding population, worsening the heat island effect and causing flooding that kills hundreds every year.

Green spaces are critical to not just minimise the severity of heatwaves and floods, but also for better mental and physical health, with city dwellers in leafy neighbourh­oods living longer, according to the Barcelona Institute for Global Health.

Last year, the UN announced plans to create urban forests in cities in Africa and Asia to improve air quality, cut the risk of floods and heatwaves, and halt land degradatio­n.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has brought the critical role of green spaces for well-being into focus, as residents thronged parks and gardens for exercise during extended lockdowns.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has pledged to increase tree cover to a third of the country’s total land area by 2030, from about a quarter.

With the urban forest scheme, the focus should be on reviving native species of trees that are best suited for local conditions rather than non-native trees that would hurt the ecology, according to forestry social enterprise Afforestt.

“The idea of urban forests is wonderful. But currently, India does not have a supply of indigenous seedlings to create 200 urban forests,” said Sunny Verma, Afforestt’s executive director.

“If this project focuses just on plantation, without thorough research about the right mix of native species for each region, then it will defeat the purpose,” he said. | Reuters

 ??  ?? Narendra Modi
Narendra Modi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa