What's new

Airport, container depot, township in 16,610 hectares of pristine Nicobar cleared

Lava820

BANNED
Joined
Jul 19, 2022
Messages
483
Reaction score
-6
Country
India
Location
India
The Centre has cleared the decks for the controversial Rs 75,000 crore project to construct a greenfield international airport, an international container transhipment terminal, a township and power plants across 16,610 hectares of pristine forests in a Great Nicobar island.
The environment ministry's Expert Appraisal Committee on Infrastructure projects approved the project on the island that is home to the indigenous Shompen tribe, besides rare flora and fauna from the Nicobar megapode, leatherback turtles, the endemic Nicobar Macaque and saltwater crocodiles. 30 of the 51 active nests of the Nicobar megapod - described by the EAC as keystone species of the Nicobar island - will be permanently destroyed, the EAC has recorded in the minutes of its August 22-23 meeting that cleared the project. It will also involve felling of over 8.5 lakh trees, loss of 12-20 hectares of mangrove cover, claiming 298 hectares of sea bed and considerable coral translocation.

The Great Nicobar Island was declared as a biosphere reserve in January 1989 by the Centre and included in the Unesco man and biosphere programme in May 2013. It is considered a global biodiversity hotspot, which explains the strong opposition to the project from several quarters.

"The Indian Ocean Region in general and the Indian Ocean, in particular, has turned into a strategic hotspot in recent years. In response to the increasing strategic value of this IOR, a critical mass of development in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands is necessary for strengthening India's regional presence", the report said, according to ET.

EAC has mandated specific 'conservation and management plans' and high funding for the endemic species, mangroves and corals and other fauna, besides several other caveats, minutes of the meeting show. EAC said three independent committees will be set up: one to oversee pollution related matters, another on biodiversity and the third to oversee welfare and issues related to Shompen and Nicobarese tribes.

The strategic and economic imperative that the government has pitched for clearing the project, according to a home ministry note on March 30 to the environment ministry, mentioned that the airport proposed at Gandhi Nagar-Shastri Nagar area would be a 'joint military-civil, dual-use airport, under the operational control of Indian Navy' and its details should not be made public due its strategic nature.

However, the airport is expected to handle over 4,000 passengers in peak hour, EAC records show. A March 2021 pre-feasibility report submitted to EAC in earlier meetings cited national security and 'ongoing consolidation of the Indian Ocean region and the military and economic impact of this consideration'.

The Great Nicobar Island also represents a significant economic development opportunity as the main east-west shipping route that links east Asian exports with the Indian Ocean, Suez Canal and Europe runs just to the south of this Island, it said.

"By building a container port in this location, India can participate more fully in the global shipping trade" and generate lakhs of new jobs, the report said. Other countries like Myanmar, China and Sri Lanka were gearing up to develop deep water facilities for taking a major share of trade by developing suitable harbour facilities and it is therefore imperative that India should do the same, the report contended.

Great Nicobar Island is considered perfect as a site as it is equidistant from Colombo, Port Klang and Singapore and is also very close to the East-West international shipping corridor. The proposed township and power stations are to complement and supplement the economic activity and tourism development. The jury is out on the future of the Great Nicobar island.
The Expert Appraisal Committee on Infrastructure Projects cleared the projects. But according to the minutes of the meeting, it will bring great harm to the flora and fauna of the island.


@Black Tornado @VkdIndian @Cheepek @INS_Vikrant @Raj-Hindustani @Abid123 @Windjammer @MH.Yang @beijingwalker @etylo @Beast @bluesky @BananaRepublicUK @Nergal @UKBengali @AmiEktaKharapChele @Bengal71 @Bilal9
 
Last edited:
The Centre has cleared the decks for the controversial Rs 75,000 crore project to construct a greenfield international port, an international container transhipment terminal, a township and power plants across 16,610 hectares of pristine forests in a Great Nicobar island.

"The Indian Ocean Region in general and the Indian Ocean, in particular, has turned into a strategic hotspot in recent years. In response to the increasing strategic value of this IOR, a critical mass of development in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands is necessary for strengthening India's regional presence", the report said, according to ET.

The island was declared a biosphere reserve in 1989 and was included in UNESCO's man and biosphere programme in 2013. The report added that the projects will need the felling of over 850,000 trees and the loss of 12-20 hectares of mangrove forests. This will lead to a considerable loss to corals and will claim over 298 hectares of the sea bed.

The Expert Appraisal Committee on Infrastructure Projects cleared the projects. But according to the minutes of the meeting, it will bring great harm to the flora and fauna of the island.

The island is home to the Shompen tribe, and rare flora and fauna like the Nicobar megapode, leatherback turtles, the endemic Nicobar Macaque and saltwater crocodiles. Nearly 30 out of 51 nests of Nicobar megapode will be permanently destroyed, the ET report added.

The panel however said that three independent committees will be set up. One will oversee pollution-related matters, another will take care of the biodiversity, and the third will oversee welfare and issues related to Shompen and Nicobarese tribes.

@Black Tornado @VkdIndian @Cheepek @INS_Vikrant @Raj-Hindustani @Abid123 @Windjammer @MH.Yang @beijingwalker @etylo @Beast @bluesky @BananaRepublicUK @Nergal @UKBengali @AmiEktaKharapChele @Bengal71 @Bilal9
Dont tag me, i am generally not interested in indian news.
 
I only read the first paragraph but it's a wise investment. I only hope the environment of Andamans and Nicobar is not damaged.
 

Back
Top Bottom