The entire Western Ghats
must be considered as ecologically sensitive, especially to ensure the
sustainability of the rivers of the Indian Peninsula, the Madhav Gadgil
Committee report has said. Peninsular rivers such as the Krishna,
Godavari and Cauvery that drain the Deccan Plateau and flow eastwards
originate in the Western Ghats.
"Hundreds of shorter perennial
monsoon fed west flowing rivers like Sharavati, Netravathi, Periyar and
the Bharathapuzha travel through steeper and more undulating topography
before emptying into the Arabian Sea.
A rough estimate reveals that 245 million people in the five Western
Ghats states directly depend on these rivers for their diverse water
needs. Geographically, the Western Ghats is the catchment for river
systems that drain almost 40% of the land area in India," reads the
report. According to the report, the Ghats meets all these criteria and
so deserve to be protected in its entirety.
The Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel report
Part II has now been placed unofficially in the public domain. The
committee, which prepared the report was headed by noted ecologist
Madhav Gadgil. Though the report was submitted in August last year, the
union ministry of environment and forests has been reluctant to make it
public.
The recommendation of declaring the entire ghats that traverse through the six states of Tamil Nadu,
Kerala, Karnataka, Goa Maharashtra and Gujarat would mean a complete
ban on mining and stricter green laws for other industries such as power
and agriculture. The panel has based its recommendation on various
studies carried out by scientists and institutions across the six
states, geo-spatial database, etc.
By:times of india
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