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Centre clarifies on definition of land as forest GS: 3 EMPOWER IAS

 

Centre clarifies on definition of land as forest

 

 

In news:

  • The Forest Advisory Committee (FAC) of the Environment Ministry has clarified that the States need not take the Centre’s approval to define what constitutes unclassified land as forest. The states are free to decide on the criteria to classify land as forests.

 

Important facts:

  • The freedom to define land, not already classified as forests by the Centre or state records, as forest has been the prerogative of the States since 1996.
  • Since 2014, the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) has been considering evolving a legal definition of forest and reportedly prepared drafts as late as 2016. These, however, have never been made public and the FAC's clarification officially signifies an end to such efforts.
  • The FAC, the apex body that deliberates on granting permission to industry to fell forests, said States, having well established forest departments, are in a better position, rather than MoEF&CC, to understand their own forests and needs, and should frame criteria for their forests criteria so finalised by a state need not be subject to approval by MoEF&CC”.
  • The subject came up for discussion at the meeting because the Uttarakhand government had put forth a set of criteria defining forest land and asked the ministry for it's opinion, the minutes of the meeting noted.
  • The conundrum of defining forests has been around since the 1980s.
  • The 1996 Supreme Court judgement expanded the definition of forest to include lands that were already notified by the Centre as forests, that appear in government records as forests as well as those that fell in the “dictionary definition” of forest.
  • The latter clause allows the States to evolve their own criteria and define tracts of land as forest, and these would then be bound by forest conservation laws.
  • Forests defined under this criteria, according to him, constituted about 1% of the country’s forests and once so defined would be known as 'deemed forests.'

 

Then who will declare land as forest?

 

States prerogative:

  • The onus on the States to define forests is also significant, environmentalists have pointed out, because the States often claim that they are helpless in preventing encroachment because a patch of land in question hadn't been notified as forest.
  • A recent instance was the felling of trees in Mumbai's Aarey Colony, which officially isn't classified as 'forest.'
  • The freedom to define land, not already classified as forests by the Centre or State records, as forest has been the prerogative of the States since 1996 and stems from a Supreme Court order, called the Godavarman judgment
  • FAC said that State forest departments should frame criteria for their forests and finalized by the State need not be subject to approval by MoEF&CC.
  • An all-encompassing definition of forest wasn’t possible for India because the country has 16 different kinds of forest.
  • A tract of grassland in one State might qualify in one region as forest, but not in another. However, once a State applied a criterion, it couldn’t be reversed.
  • A recent instance was the felling of trees in Mumbai’s Aarey Colony, which officially isn’t classified as forest.

 

Forest Advisory Committee

  • The Forest Advisory Committee is a key statutory body which considers questions on the diversion of forest land for non-forest uses such as mining, industrial projects, townships etc.
  • It advises the government on the issue of granting forest clearances.

 

 

Conclusion:

Given our federal structure, it might be difficult for the Centre to come up with a definition but nothing stops them from formulating a broad set of guidelines to guide the States on the criteria for evolving such a definition

 

Source)

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/centre-clarifies-on-definition-of-land-as-forest/article29745691.ece