The Forest (Conservation) Amendment Bill 2023 aims to build forest carbon stock through plantations, improve livelihoods, and make land available for compensatory afforestation. However, critics argue it could significantly reduce forest area by narrowly defining forests, removing clearance requirements, and exempting certain projects. Nearly 200,000 square kilometers of land recorded as forest but not officially designated as such could lose protections. The bill may negatively impact many forest dwellers and biodiversity.
The Forest (Conservation) Amendment Bill 2023 aims to build forest carbon stock through plantations, improve livelihoods, and make land available for compensatory afforestation. However, critics argue it could significantly reduce forest area by narrowly defining forests, removing clearance requirements, and exempting certain projects. Nearly 200,000 square kilometers of land recorded as forest but not officially designated as such could lose protections. The bill may negatively impact many forest dwellers and biodiversity.
The Forest (Conservation) Amendment Bill 2023 aims to build forest carbon stock through plantations, improve livelihoods, and make land available for compensatory afforestation. However, critics argue it could significantly reduce forest area by narrowly defining forests, removing clearance requirements, and exempting certain projects. Nearly 200,000 square kilometers of land recorded as forest but not officially designated as such could lose protections. The bill may negatively impact many forest dwellers and biodiversity.
The Forest (Conservation) Amendment Bill 2023 aims to build forest carbon stock through plantations, improve livelihoods, and make land available for compensatory afforestation. However, critics argue it could significantly reduce forest area by narrowly defining forests, removing clearance requirements, and exempting certain projects. Nearly 200,000 square kilometers of land recorded as forest but not officially designated as such could lose protections. The bill may negatively impact many forest dwellers and biodiversity.
Recently, the Forest (Conservation) Amendment Bill 2023 was cleared
by Parliament.
About the Forest (Conservation) Amendment Bill, 2023
Restrictions on activities in the forest: The Act restricts the de-
reservation of forest or use of forest land for non-forest purposes. o Such restrictions may be lifted with the prior approval of the central government. o Non-forest purposes include the use of land for cultivating horticultural crops, running zoos, ‘eco-tourism’ facilities or for any purpose other than reafforestation. Assigning of land through a lease or otherwise: Under the Act, state government or any authority requires prior approval of the central government to direct the assigning of forest land through a lease or otherwise to any organisation (such as a private person, agency, authority, corporation) not owned by the government.
Building forest carbon stock & improving Livelihood: The
predominant idea of the proposed changes is to build forest carbon stock by raising plantations. o The Bill talks about keeping up with “dynamic changes in the ecological, strategic and economic aspirations of the country” and “improvement of livelihoods for forest- dependent communities.” o The scope of the amendments boils down to pushing plantations to achieve carbon neutrality by limiting the scope of the Act.
Compensatory afforestation: The Bill also seeks to make land
available for developers to meet their legal obligation towards compensatory afforestation in lieu of forest land diverted for development projects. o If the scope of the FC Act is restricted, fewer projects will be required to obtain forest clearance, which is considered a ‘hurdle’ by most developers in and outside the government. o But it will also help developers secure forest clearance when they need it. o A key condition for forest clearance is that a developer must carry out compensatory afforestation on equivalent non- forest land or, if non-forest land is not available, on degraded forest land twice the extent of the forest area diverted. BorderLands: It also exempts border lands from the obligation to seek permissions to clear forests in order to construct “strategic linear projects of national importance”.
Criticisms
Definition of a ‘forest’: The Bill’s principal thrust is that
it redefines what a ‘forest’ is in Indian law. It stipulates that only those lands that were notified as ‘forest’ under the Indian Forest Act 1927, any other relevant law or were recorded as ‘forests’ in government records will be acknowledged as ‘forests’ under the Act as well. o This revision stands in stark contrast to the wide applicability of the extant Act at present – i.e. it applies to “any forest land”. o So, the amendment opens up all land that hasn’t been officially classified as ‘forests’ to commercial activity. No checks and balances: The Act also removes the checks and balances the Act currently includes, in the form of forest clearance permissions and the informed consent of the local community. Choosing plantation over forests: Forests are a lot more than a sum of trees. Unlike man-made plantations, natural forests perform a range of ecosystem services that are key to the survival and well-being of the millions of species that they support, and also provide direct livelihood and subsistence to crores of people. Exemption for linear infrastructure projects: The Bill seeks to exempt linear infrastructure projects – like roads and highways – from seeking forest clearance permissions if they are located within 100 km of the national border. o Experts have raised concerns because “strategic linear projects of national importance” is an undefined term and can thus be misused to push through infrastructure projects that are devastating for the local ecology. Non-inclusivity of nomenclature: There were objections to the Act’s new name — Van (Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan) Adhiniyam, translated as Forest (Conservation and Augmentation) Act, instead of the existing Forest (Conservation) Act — on the grounds that it was “non-inclusive” and left out many among the “(non-Hindi speaking) population both in South India and also in the North-East.” Not referred to Parliamentary Standing Committee: o It has also been claimed that the Bill was not referred to the relevant Parliamentary Standing Committee, which in this case would have been the Standing Committee on Science and Technology, Environment, Forests and Climate Change. Implications
How much area will be affected?
o For an idea of the scale, consider the latest State of Forests Report (SFR 2021), which records India’s forest cover as 713,789 sq km. o Of this, nearly 28% or 197,159 sq km — roughly the size of Gujarat — is not recorded as ‘forest’. The areas that stand to be affected in a significant way include about 40% of the Aravalli range and 95% of the Niyamgiri hill range; the latter is home to the Dongria Kondh, a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group. Many experts are also uncertain, and thus apprehensive, about the actual extent of land that will fall outside the purview of the amended Act considering the State-wise data of deemed forests is not publicly available. Exemption of linear infrastructure projects is of particular concern in the Northeastern States, where the exemption would apply de facto almost across the region.