SC’s remark on cutting trees 'wake-up call' for govt say environmentalists

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New Delhi, Mar 26 (PTI) The Supreme Court's remark that cutting a large number of trees is worse than killing human beings should be a "wake-up call" for the central government, which has been "weakening" forest protection laws, and for states that have been "mindlessly" clearing green cover for development, environmentalists said on Wednesday.
    The apex court made the observation while rejecting the plea of a man who had chopped down 454 trees in the protected Taj Trapezium Zone. "There should be no mercy in the environmental case. Felling a large number of trees is worse than killing a human," it said.
    Environmentalists welcomed the court's strong stand on forest protection but questioned whether governments would take it seriously.
    "This is a wake-up call for the central government which has constantly been diluting forest protection laws," said Bhim Singh Rawat from the South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People (SANDRP).
    He said the situation is particularly alarming in the geologically fragile and climatically sensitive Himalayan states.
    "The continuous push for large-scale infrastructure projects -- such as hydropower, dams, roads, tunnels, and railways --has led to the loss of thousands of hectares of pristine forests. This has increased disaster risks, vulnerability and fatalities in the region," he said.
    Rawat also claimed that the judiciary has "failed" to protect forests, citing the Char Dham All-Weather Road project in Uttarakhand as an example.
    Neelam Ahluwalia, environmentalist and founder member of People for Aravallis, said India is highly vulnerable to climate change, facing everything from extreme heatwaves to glacial lake outburst floods.
    "Our forests and natural ecosystems are our only protective shields, yet we are destroying them in the name of so-called development projects. From (Great) Nicobar to Hasdeo, Odisha, the Northeast, and the Aravallis, forests are being axed across the country," she said.
    Ahluwalia highlighted how illegal, unchecked mining in the Aravallis has devastated green cover, food and water sources in the already water-stressed region.
    In 2018, the Supreme Court's Central Empowered Committee reported that 31 Aravalli hills had disappeared in Rajasthan -- razed by mining.
    "Along with the hills, vegetation and green cover goes too. Real estate and mining have destroyed hills after hills across the 692 km Aravalli range, creating 12 breaches from Ajmer in Rajasthan to Mahendergarh in Haryana, allowing the Thar desert to advance toward the Indo-Gangetic plains. If this continues, all of northwest India will face desertification," she warned.
    She also alleged flaws in compensatory afforestation, saying a petition in the Supreme Court challenging the Green Credit Rules had highlighted several CAG reports showing extremely low plantation survival rates, some as low as six per cent.
    "Compensatory afforestation is not a solution for destroying virgin forests for roads, railways, mining, buildings, solar farms, and hydropower projects. In this climate crisis, we simply cannot afford to axe and destroy our existing trees, green belts, forests and ecosystems any further," she said.
    Guman Singh, coordinator of the Himalayan Policy Campaign, disagreed with the Supreme Court's blanket statement against tree cutting, calling it an "unscientific viewpoint".
    "Forest-dwellers in mountainous and forested regions depend on trees for their livelihood -- for building houses, firewood, and making tools and utensils. Saying that trees cannot be cut at all is not correct, as it would harm these indigenous and traditional forest communities," he said.
    However, Singh blamed modern development policies for large-scale deforestation.
    "Forests and large trees are being lost due to infrastructure projects such as road widening, large dams, urbanisation and construction. These so-called development policies must be stopped," he said.
    "I cannot agree with the Supreme Court's one-sided perspective, but I certainly agree that the destruction of millions of trees for large projects must be strictly stopped. We also need to create new mixed forests on a large scale," he added.

(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)