Cancel green nod given to Great Nicobar project: Cong.
- June 18, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Cancel green nod given to Great Nicobar project: Cong.
Sub: Environment
Sec: Protected Area
About the Great Nicobar Development project
- Project Area: 130 sq. km. of pristine forest
- A “greenfield city” has been proposed, including
- An International Container Transshipment Terminal (ICTT),
- A greenfield international airport,
- A power plant, and
- A township for the personnel who will implement the project.
- A total 166.1 sq km along the island’s southeastern and southern coasts have been identified for project along a coastal strip of width between 2 km and 4 km.
- Some 130 sq km of forests have been sanctioned for diversion, and 9.64 lakh trees are likely to be felled.
- The port will be controlled by the Indian Navy, while the airport will have dual military-civilian functions and will cater to tourism as well.
- Roads, public transport, water supply and waste management facilities, and several hotels have been planned to cater to tourists.
Environmental and Legal Issues
- Environmental Concerns:
- Potential destruction of pristine rainforest
- The project is located in an earthquake-prone zone
- Permanent subsidence during the 2004 tsunami
- Cutting down of 9.6 lakh trees, with compensatory afforestation planned in Haryana
- Impact on Indigenous Tribes:
- Threat to the survival and well-being of the Shompen, a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG)
- Alleged violations of tribal rights and inadequate consultation with the Tribal Council
Legal and Administrative Actions
- Environmental Clearance: Granted by an expert committee, despite concerns
- National Green Tribunal (NGT):
- Legal challenge leading to the formation of an expert committee
- Investigation led by the Secretary of the Environment Ministry; results not yet public
- Classified Project: Details withheld from the public portal by Ministry of Home Affairs, citing “strategic importance”
Great Nicobar:
- Great Nicobar is the southernmost island of the Nicobar Islands Archipelago.
- It covers 1,03,870 hectares of unique and threatened tropical evergreen forest ecosystems.
- It is home to a very rich ecosystem, including 650 species of angiosperms, ferns, gymnosperms, and bryophytes, among others.
- In terms of fauna, there are over 1800 species, some of which are endemic to this area.
- Ecological Characteristics:
- The Great Nicobar Biosphere Reserve harbours a wide spectrum of ecosystems comprising tropical wet evergreen forests, mountain ranges reaching a height of 642 m (Mt. Thullier) above sea level, and coastal plains.
- Tribe:
- The Mongoloid Shompen Tribe, about 200 in number, live in the forests of the biosphere reserve, particularly along the rivers and streams.
- They are hunters and food gatherers, dependent on forest and marine resources for sustenance.
- Another Mongoloid Tribe, Nicobarese, about 300 in number, used to live in settlements along the west coast.
- After the tsunami in 2004, which devastated their settlement on the western coast, they were relocated to Afra Bay in the North Coast and Campbell Bay.
Source: TH