File Photo of Kerala Flood. (Photo | EPS) 
India

Goa may go Kerala way, warns ecologist Madhav Gadgil

Like in some other states, Goa, too, is witnessing activities which are driven by greed for unlimited profits, said ecologist Madhav Gadgil. 

From our online archive

PANAJI: Noted ecologist Madhav Gadgil has warned Goa may face the same fate as the flood-battered Kerala if it does not take precautions on the environmental front.

Like in some other states, Goa, too, is witnessing activities which are driven by greed for unlimited profits, said Gadgil, who headed a committee that authored a widely debated study on the Western Ghats a few years ago.

"Certainly all sorts of problems are beginning to surface on the environmental front in the Western Ghats. Goa, of course, does not have the Western Ghats which are so high as in Kerala, but I am sure Goa will also experience all sorts of problems," he said, reacting to the worst-ever floods in the southern state.

He said the reason for not taking any environmental precaution (in general) is pure greed for unlimited profits.

"You have seen it in Goa too. The Union government- constituted Justice M B Shah commission has estimated illegal profits of Rs 35,000 crore from illegal mining," he said.

"There is also enormous profit in the business of stone quarrying while there is very little investment," he added while talking about the rampant hill in the Western Ghats.

"The greed for enormous profits has been allowed to go on unchecked, which has actually worsened economic disparity in the society.

"So now those who are making money through these means are even more effective in getting the government allows this kind of rampant illegal behaviour," Gadgil said.

The ecologist said governments have been lax on implementing environmental norms.

"The central government is actually bending over backward to make sure the National Green Tribunal does not function properly," he said.

Gadgil had done an extensive study on Goa's environment based on the data provided by iron ore mining companies in their Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) reports in 2011. He had then said the mining companies submitted false information in their EIA reports.

"In Goa, they had asked me to look into the impact of mining on the environment. Every EIA suppressed fact about the hydrological impact of mining," the 73-year-old expert said.

"On 'sadas' (plains) of Goa there are a lot of streams which are originating but they dont mention about them in their EIA reports. All kind of false statements are made in these reports," he said.

Gadgil had headed the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP) set up by the government.

The WGEEP, in its 2011 report, had recommended that several areas in Kerala which come under the Western Ghats be classified as ecologically sensitive.

The panel had recommended strict curbs on mining and quarrying and on use of land for non-forest purposes.

Powerful 7.8 earthquake jolts southern Philippines, leaving 12 dead and triggering tsunami

Trinamool Congress leader and Falta candidate Jahangir Khan arrested near Nepal border

INDIA bloc lacks ground-level conviction, exists only in imagination, says BJP ahead of Oppn meeting

'Shameful': Pinarayi Vijayan slams Telangana CM Revanth Reddy over 'Hitler inspiration' remark on HYDRAA

Will protest across states if Pradhan doesn’t resign by June 13: CJP founder Dipke

SCROLL FOR NEXT