Kerala has squandered the chance to be a role model for conserving biodiversity.
        
 
 
Politics usually trumps environmental concerns in India. This has 
been the state of play for decades whether we speak of conserving 
forests, rivers or other ecologically important resources. The latest 
victim in this game of political football is the chain of the Western 
Ghats that stretches over 1,500 km across six states. No politician has 
dared question the science that informed the important report of the 
Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP), led by noted scientist 
Madhav Gadgil, that was 
submitted last year to the government. But 
instead of understanding the arguments that lay behind the various 
recommendations made in the report to protect what 
Science 
magazine terms as the world’s second-most “irreplaceable” site of 
threatened species, politicians of all persuasions have ensured that 
this report is first diluted, then misrepresented, and finally tied up 
in political knots. The latter will guarantee that what little could 
still be salvaged of the original report will now be firmly buried.
The course the WGEEP report has taken is instructive, and 
predictable. Gadgil and his team studied the biodiversity richness of 
the Western Ghats and then came up with a set of recommendations to 
ensure that these resources are properly managed and protected. There 
was no blanket advice to cordon off the entire region, given that it 
covers 44 districts and 142 talukas in the six states. What it suggested
 instead was to divide the Western Ghats into three “ecologically 
sensitive zones” (ESZ). Only ESZ 1 would be closed to any interference 
by way of mining, power generation (thermal or hydel) and industry. 
Zones 2 and 3 would be permitted these industrial activities on a graded
 basis and on condition that they conformed to environmentally benign 
criteria.
The most significant aspect of the Gadgil report was its 
recommendation that the entire process be rooted in the gram sabhas that
 should be the ultimate authority to decide what kind of development, if
 any, should be permitted in an area considered ecologically sensitive. 
This recommendation conforms to similar criteria that exist in laws like
 the Forest Rights Act.
Yet, as we know from places like Goa and Odisha, it is this type of 
decentralised decision-making that is the biggest threat to those who 
care little about conservation and are more interested in exploiting 
natural resources for their version of so-called “development”. Hence, 
whether it is mining, quarrying, sand mining, dams, thermal power plants
 or polluting industries, environmental concerns are seen as obstacles 
that must be removed for real “progress”. Given such thinking, no one 
was surprised when the committee set up by the Ministry of Environment 
and Forests (MoEF) headed by K Kasturirangan to study the Gadgil report 
chose to ignore this particular recommendation.
The violent protests against the Kasturirangan report in Kerala last 
month were the direct result of a notification by the MoEF identifying 
eco-sensitive areas where five categories of activities would be 
prohibited. These are quarrying, mining, sand mining, thermal power 
plants, construction projects covering more than 20,000 sq km, township 
and area development projects of 50 acres or more, and polluting 
industries. Falling within areas notified as ecologically sensitive are 
123 villages.
Instead of explaining what this notification would mean, and that it 
would not necessarily lead to displacement or loss of livelihood, local 
political considerations took over. Opposition politicians and some 
religious heads whipped up anger against the state government using a 
volatile mix of misrepresentation of facts and genuine fears. On its 
part, the state government failed to anticipate such a reaction. And the
 MoEF, which had provided the trigger for the protests, backed down 
claiming that its notification was only a “draft” which would be 
finalised after consultation with all affected states. Surely, the issue
 could have been handled more sensibly by sending this so-called “draft”
 to the state governments concerned, instead of posting it on the 
ministry website.
That said, the real tragedy of the recent stand-off in Kerala between
 the state government and the opposition is the opportunity missed for 
the state to become a role model for other states. Kerala has a rich 
tradition of involvement of panchayats and gram sabhas in the 
developmental process. The consultative planning processes the state 
pioneered have been lauded around the world. Kerala has an educated and 
informed citizenry that could have been included in the implementation 
of the efforts to conserve the Western Ghats. In fact, Kerala could have
 demonstrated how the preservation of biodiversity can sit comfortably 
with people’s livelihoods and survival needs and is not in opposition to
 them. The Gadgil report’s emphasis on including gram sabhas in the 
planning and implementation process was premised on the belief that such
 a process will make efforts at conservation of biodiversity sustainable
 and strong. At this juncture, even the greatly diluted recommendations 
of the Kasturirangan Committee are unlikely to be implemented with any 
seriousness. The price for this will not be paid by politicians who plan
 only for the next elections, but by ordinary people who will suffer the
 very real consequences of the loss of irreplaceable natural resources.