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Thread: Secrets of the Western Ghats

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    Default Secrets of the Western Ghats

    Read this article in The Hindu, and thought of sharing here..

    Secrets of the Western Ghats
    May 12, 2012
    RAMACHANDRA GUHA

    The government's decision to keep the Gadgil Committee report under wraps has prevented an informed discussion on the competing claims of development and ecology

    The Western Ghats are as important to the ecological and cultural life of the nation as the Himalayas. Running from Maharashtra right down to Kerala, they are a staggeringly rich reservoir of biodiversity. They give rise to many important rivers and are home to many significant places of pilgrimage. Their forests, fields and rivers sustain tens of millions of farmers, herders, fisherfolk, pastoralists and artisans.

    Over the past few decades, however, the ecological integrity of the Western Ghats has been subjected to sharp and sometimes savage attack. Unregulated logging, open-cast mining, large dams, and the diversion of land to real-estate barons have led to environmental degradation as well as social discontent.

    Series of meetings

    In March 2010, the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF) asked Professor Madhav Gadgil to head an Expert Committee to study the situation in the Western Ghats, and recommend how best to reconcile the sometimes competing claims of environment and development. This was a wise, even inspired, choice. Gadgil is a world-renowned ecologist; born close to the Western Ghats, he has spent his professional life doing fieldwork in its woods, streams, villages and fields. Moreover, he is a pragmatic scientist who does not romanticise rural poverty or the “purity” of nature; rather, he has always sought to find ways of augmenting productivity and incomes while maintaining environmental stability.

    The committee headed by Madhav Gadgil had other top ecologists as members. Government officials and civil society activists were also represented. Between March 2010 and August 2011, the committee held 14 panel meetings. Its members travelled extensively in the Western Ghats, meeting a wide range of stakeholders. It held eight consultations with government agencies and 40 consultations with civil society groups. It commissioned 42 papers by experts.

    ‘Interests would be affected'

    In September 2011, the Committee presented a 300 page report to the MoEF. The report is likely to be exhaustive as well as balanced, brimming with insight and information. For it is the work of scientists rather than ideologues. Alas, I cannot be more specific, for, in an astonishingly short-sighted move, the Ministry has refused to make the document public. Worse, it has given no indication to the hardworking members that their service has been recognised or appreciated. Requests for appointments made by Professor Gadgil himself have been refused.

    The government's secrecy has been challenged by civil society groups. An activist based in Kerala appealed to the Central Information Commission (CIC) urging that the report be released. The CIC asked the Environment Ministry the reasons for its decision. The (ambiguous) answer was that the “scientific or economic interests of the State” would be adversely affected if the report was made public. An official said the Ministry was worried that if the Gadgil Committee report was released, there would be “an influx of proposals for declaration of eco-sensitive zones in the Western Ghats” by various individuals and organisations.

    The CIC considered the Ministry's reasons, before rejecting them as unpersuasive. In an order issued last month, it quoted a judgment of Justice Mathew in a case of 1975: “The people of this country have a right to know every public act, everything that is done in a public way by their public functionaries. They are entitled to know the particulars of every public transaction in all its bearing.”

    The Information Commissioner hearing the appeal noted that “in a democracy, the masters of the government are the citizens and the argument that public servants will decide policy matters by not involving them — without disclosing the complete reasons to the masters — is specious.” He observed that reports commissioned from scientific experts and at government expense, must be made accessible to citizens. “This would facilitate an informed discussion between citizens [and the government] based on a report prepared with their/public money.”

    On trust and the corrupt

    The Commissioner further observed that even if the government “decides not to accept the findings or recommendations [of such reports], their significance as an important input cannot be disregarded arbitrarily. If such reports are put in [the] public domain, citizens' views and concerns can be articulated in a scientific and reasonable manner. If the Government has reasons to ignore the reports, these should be logically put before people. Otherwise citizens would believe that the Government's decisions are arbitrary or corrupt. Such a trust deficit would never be in the interests of the Nation.”

    The CIC's conclusion was forthright: putting the report in the public domain would “bring greater trust in the government and its functionaries, and hurt only the corrupt.” It instructed the Ministry to provide an attested photocopy of the report to the applicant by May 5, and to put it on the Ministry website by May 10.

    Rather than follow the CIC's orders, the Ministry has chosen to appeal its decision in court. This is deeply unfortunate. For one of the few positives of the second UPA government has been the performance of the MoEF. The two Ministers who have held office since 2009 have both been focused and hard-working. They have infused energy into a previously moribund department, allowing it to more closely fulfil its original mandate, of assuring — or at least arguing for — a model of development that is sustainable rather than predatory.

    That hard-won credibility has now been put at stake by the decision not to release the Western Ghats report. One can only speculate at the “special interests” that lie behind this move. Suffice it to say that those interests are antithetical to ecology, democracy, and to the history and heritage of the Western Ghats themselves.

    (Ramachandra Guha is a historian. E-mail: ramachandraguha@yahoo.in)
    Regards,
    Mrudul Godbole

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    Default

    MOEF has officially published the Expert Panel Report on Western Ghat Ecology (Madhav Gadgil commitee) on their website.


    http://moef.nic.in/downloads/public-...f-comments.pdf

    http://moef.nic.in/downloads/public-...f-comments.pdf

    You need to click on the link in the office memo and Pls do opine, make a comment, send a mail or do something.... this is perhaps the greatest gift we in the south have got from Mother Earth. Aren't we obliged in a million ways ??

    Roopak

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    Default Western Ghats.... Gadgil Committee

    Reproducing from The Hindu.... some of the updates..

    The Hindu, Dec 27, 2011

    Entire Western Ghats ‘ecologically sensitive'
    Panel proposes indefinite moratorium on new clearances for mining in the region.
    The Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP) has designated the entire hill range as an Ecologically Sensitive Area.
    The panel, in its report, has classified the 142 taluks in the Western Ghats boundary into Ecologically Sensitive Zones (ESZ) 1, 2 and 3. It recommended that “no new dams based on large-scale storage be permitted in Ecologically Sensitive Zone 1. Since both the Athirappilly of Kerala and Gundia of Karnataka hydel project sites fall in Ecologically Sensitive Zone 1, these projects should not be accorded environmental clearance,” it said.
    For Goa, the committee headed by eminent ecologist Madhav Gadgil, suggested an “indefinite moratorium on new environmental clearances for mining in ESZ 1 and 2, phasing out of mining in ESZ 1 by 2016 and continuation of existing mining in ESZ 2 under strict regulation with an effective system of social audit.”
    “The moratorium on new clearances in ESZ 2 can be revisited when the situation improves and a comprehensive study on the impact of mining on the ecology, environment, human health, and biodiversity by a competent multidisciplinary team, working along with people's institutions, has been concluded,” it said.
    No new polluting industries, including coal-based power plants, should be allowed in ESZ 1 and 2. The existing red and orange category industries should be asked to switch to zero pollution by 2016, with an effective system of social audit, the report said.
    Regarding the mining and related activities in Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts, the panel said investigations in the plains and coastal tracts “suggested that these are under severe environmental and social stress.” It is essential that a “cumulative impact analysis of various development activities in these tracts, ideally in conjunction with Raigad district of Maharashtra and Goa, must be undertaken,” preferably by the National Institute of Oceanography, Goa.
    The panel recommended that “the current moratorium on new environmental clearances for mining, and red and orange category polluting industries and power plants in the plains and coastal tracts of Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts should be extended till satisfactory completion of a carrying capacity analysis. The moratorium may then be reviewed in the light of the findings of the study,” it recommended.
    It suggested the formation of a Western Ghats Ecology Authority (WGEA), a statutory authority which enjoys the powers under the Environment (Protection) Act. “As the Ghats is an extensive region spanning over six States, 44 districts, and 142 taluks, the WGEA should function in a networked fashion with six constituent State Western Ghats Ecology Authorities, appointed jointly by the State Governments and the Central Ministry of Environment and Forests,” it has proposed.
    The panel was asked to assess the current status of ecology of the Ghats region, demarcate areas within the region that were to be notified as ecologically sensitive ones and make recommendations for the conservation, protection and rejuvenation of the entire area. The suggestions for the formation of the WGEA were also among its mandate.
    It was subsequently asked to study the entire stretch of Ratnagiri and Sindhudurg districts, including the coastal region and to specifically examine the Gundia and Athirappilly hydroelectric projects. The views of the panel regarding the moratorium on new mining licences in Goa were also sought by the Ministry.

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