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Forest Conservation Act

26.02.2024

 

Forest Conservation Act , Daily Current Affairs , RACE IAS : Best IAS Coaching in Lucknow 

 

For Prelims: What is the Forest Conservation Act?, Key Point, What did the amendments deal with?, What is the import of the SC order?

 

Why in the news? 

Recently the Supreme Court ordered the government to continue following the all-encompassing “dictionary meaning” of forest which was upheld in a 1996 Supreme Court decision in the T.N.Godavarman Thirumulpad case till a final verdict is handed out on a petition challenging the amended Forest Conservation Act of 2023.

 

Key Point

The apex court has also asked the government to make public, by April, a consolidated record of land deemed as forest by States and Union Territories.

 

What is the Forest Conservation Act?

  • The Forest Conservation Act came into force in 1980 and was conceived to stop the razing of forests.
  • An estimated four million hectares of forest land had been diverted from 1951 to 1975.
  • Once the Forest conservation act came into force, the average annual rate of diversion dropped to about 22,000 hectares.
  • However, the provisions of this legislation predominantly applied to tracts of forest land which are recognised as such by the Indian Forest Act, or by States in their records since 1980.
  • Illegal timber-felling at Gudalur in the state of Tamil Nadu led the Supreme Court to deliver the landmark Godavarman Thirumulpad judgment in 1996.
  • The Supreme Court decreed that forests had to be protected irrespective of how they were classified and who owned them.
  • This brought in the concept of deemed forests which refers to forest-like tracts that weren’t officially classified as such in government or revenue records but looked like them.
  • In the 28 years that have passed since the judgment various states based on surveys and reports by expert committees have interpreted ‘forests’ differently.
  • This confusion was bound to happen due to the wide variety of forests and constituent plants in India.
  • For example, the states of Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh define a forest as a tract that spans a minimum of 10 hectares, is covered with naturally growing timber, fuel wood and yielding trees and has a density of 200 trees or more per hectare.
  • The state of Goa defines a forest as a patch of land having at least 75% covered with forest species. Some States have no parameters at all.
  • Due to the nature of varying definitions of deemed forest, estimates of their territorial spread in India range from 1% – 28% of India’s official forest area of 80 million ha.
  • The Centre’s recent attempt to amend the Forest Conservation Act was to bring clarity to the above confusion as there were large tracts of recorded-forest land that had already been legally put to non-forestry uses, but conformed to a State’s criteria of a ‘deemed forest.’
  • This confusion of forests and deemed forests also posed challenges to the use and ownership of such land.
  • Such ambiguity over the classification also bred a reluctance among private citizens to cultivate private plantations and orchards, despite their significant ecological benefits due to the fear that they would be classified as ‘forest’ (and thus render their ownership void).
  • India’s ambitions to create a carbon sink of 2.5-3 billion tonnes and also to meet its net-zero goals required forest laws to be dynamic, and the rules sought to remove ‘deemed forest,’ not already recorded as such, from the ambit of such protection.

What did the amendments deal with?

  • The amendments also put beyond the pale of protection forest land situated alongside a rail line or a road which are necessary to provide access to a habitation, up to a maximum size of 0.10 hectare.
  • Forest land which is situated within a distance of 100 kilometers along international borders or the Line of Control or Line of Actual Control, and which needed to be cleared to construct strategic linear projects of national importance would also be exempt from the Act.
  • Any ten hectares in a forest which is regarded as necessary for use in constructing security related infrastructure or five hectares in forest land affected by ‘left wing extremism’ too would be bereft of protection.
  • The government rationale is that these exemptions are necessary in order to facilitate basic infrastructure in tribal areas.
  • Apart from that, the Centre argued that the proper protection and conservation of forests by local communities, requires creating livelihood opportunities through the promotion of ecotourism, zoos and safaris.
  • But critics have pointed out that such enabling provisions already exist in another Act which is the Forest Rights Act, 2006.

What is the import of the SC order?

  • The Supreme Court’s interim order on the act implies that forests will continue to be governed as if the recent amendments of the Centre didn’t exist.
  • Most importantly the Supreme Court said that States should provide and the Centre publish reports by State-constituted expert committees on the extent of deemed forests within their territories.
  • The Court also struck down schemes to constitute zoos and safari parks on forest land.

                                                                  Source: The Hindu