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Kerala Landslides - Gadgil Panel Recommendations

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August 26, 2019

What is the issue?

  • The repeat of landslides and consequent tragedies in Kerala this year too, after the rainfall, has caused much concern.
  • The need for implementing the Gadgil panel’s suggestions is felt more important now than ever before.

What is the realisation with the recent floods?

  • The 2018 floods and landslides in Kerala caused huge financial losses and manifold human tragedies. Click here to know more
  • It was believed by many that the 2018 tragedy in Kerala marked a once-in-a-century calamity.
  • The probability of two such back-to-back events was only 1 in 10,000.
  • So, it was hoped that normalcy would return soon and people could return to business as usual.
  • Hence, a repeat of intense floods, landslides, financial losses and manifold human tragedies in 2019 too was something people were unprepared for.
  • The 2019 events have thus made people realise that it is unwise to continue business as usual.
  • This has made them seriously consider the alternatives to deal with the calamities of nature.

What does the Gadgil panel report offer?

  • One set of possibilities is provided by the recommendations of the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP) chaired by Madhav Gadgil.
  • The policy prescriptions in the report were well within the framework of the constitutional mandates, and only suggested following the existing laws.
  • This relates to environmental protection and devolution of powers, right down to the gram sabha and ward sabha level.
  • In all, the WGEEP called for a model of conservation and development compatible with each other.
  • The report sought a replacement of the prevailing ‘Develop Recklessly, Conserve Thoughtlessly’ pattern with one of ‘Develop Sustainably, Conserve Thoughtfully.’
  • This fine-tuning of development practices to the local context would have required the full involvement of local communities.
  • It would have therefore been inappropriate to depend exclusively on government agencies for deciding on and managing Ecologically Sensitive Zones (ESZs).

What was the recommendation on ESZs then?

  • The WGEEP’s mandate asked the state to demarcate areas within the Western Ghats Region that need to be notified as ecologically sensitive.
  • It was also asked to recommend for notification of such areas as ecologically sensitive zones under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • In line with the National Forest Policy, the panel decided to assign 60% of the total area of Western Ghats in Kerala as a zone of highest ecological sensitivity, ‘ESZ1’.
  • These included the region housing wildlife sanctuaries and national parks.
  • The panel proposed ‘elevation’ and ‘slope’ as two key indicators of sensitivity.
  • In Kerala, rainfall increases rapidly with elevation, and high rainfall and steep slopes render localities vulnerable to landslides.
  • Hence, areas prone to landslides would come under ESZ1.
  • The extent and quality of natural vegetation was the third indicator for classifying an area as ESZ1.
  • Landslides are under control in areas with intact natural vegetation because the roots bind the soil.
  • Any disturbance to such vegetation would render any locality that has steep slopes and experiences high rainfall susceptible to landslides.
  • Such disturbances may include -
    1. quarrying or mining
    2. replacement of natural vegetation by new plantations
    3. leveling of the land using heavy machinery
    4. construction of houses and roads
  • Therefore, it was recommended that such activities be avoided in ESZ1 areas.

How successful is Kerala in devolution of powers?

  • The Plachimada Panchayat of Kerala cancelled Coca-Cola company’s licence.
  • This was because the company polluted and depleted groundwater reserves, drying up wells and adversely impacting agriculture and livelihoods.
  • While doing so, the panchayat invoked its constitutional rights, arguing that it had the duty to protect the well-being of its citizens.
  • It thus claimed that it had the right to cancel or refuse permission for anything that affected its citizens adversely.
  • The company’s counterargument was that the panchayat was subordinate to the State government, which had granted it the licence.
  • The Kerala High Court rejected this contention, affirming that grass-roots institutions have the authority to decide on the development course in their own locality.
  • Furthermore, the Kerala legislature unanimously passed a law asking Coca-Cola to pay Plachimada Panchayat due compensation for losses inflicted on them.

What is the way forward?

  • Democracy is not merely voting once in 5 years; it is the active involvement of citizens in governing the country at all levels, especially at the local level.
  • The powers and responsibilities conferred under provisions such as the 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments, and the Biological Diversity Act, 2002 should be fully utilised.
  • The ruling that local bodies have the authority to decide on the development course in their own localities be made operational across the country.
  • Implementation of the Gadgil panel recommendations would have definitely helped manage better the heavy rainfall, and reduce the extent and intensity of landslides.
  • It is only wise to apply the panel’s recommendations at least now.

 

Source: The Hindu

Related News: Lessons from Kerala Floods, Dams and Flood Control, Gadgil Panel Report

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