Himalayan Ecological Risks Amid Char Dham Road Expansion

Context:
The Uttarakhand Forest Department has approved the felling of nearly 7,000 Devdar (Deodar) trees for the Char Dham road-widening project, raising concerns about ecological fragility, disaster vulnerability, and policy contradictions in the Himalayan region.

Key Highlights:

Project Details & Policy Framework

  • The Char Dham Road Project involves widening nearly 700 km of roads in Uttarakhand.
    • Adopts the DL-PS (Double Lane with Paved Shoulder) standard mandating a 12-metre paved surface.
    • The region already contains 800+ active landslide zones.
    • Approval granted for felling ~7,000 Deodar trees, crucial to Himalayan ecology.

Ecological & Climate Concerns

  • Since 1950, the Himalayas have warmed 50% faster than the global average.
    • In 2025, over 4,000 deaths in India were linked to climate-induced disasters — with Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand most affected.
    • Climate change acts as a “risk multiplier” — intensifying erratic rainfall, cloudbursts, glacial melt.

Ecological Significance of Deodar Forests

  • Slope stabilization and landslide prevention
    • Maintenance of Ganga water quality
    • Regulation of microclimates
    • Enhancing carbon sequestration

Institutional & Regulatory Context

  • Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone (2012) — ~4,000 sq. km buffer to protect pristine Ganga stretch.
    National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem (NMSHE, 2014) under NAPCC aims at ecological monitoring and hazard mitigation.
    • Concerns over weak Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) compliance.

Human-Induced Vulnerabilities

  • Large-scale hydropower projects
    • Unregulated tourism and vehicular traffic
    • Ignoring carrying capacity of fragile mountain ecosystems

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • DL-PS Standard – Road design requiring 12m paved width.
    Deodar (Cedrus deodara) – Native Himalayan conifer, key for slope stability.
    Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone – Notified under Environment Protection Act.
    NMSHE – One of the 8 National Missions under NAPCC.
    Carrying Capacity – Maximum population/activity level an ecosystem can sustain without degradation.
    • Himalayas classified as young fold mountains, geologically unstable.

Relevant Mains Points:

  1. Environment & Ecology (GS 3)
    • Conflict between infrastructure development vs ecological sustainability.
    • Weak enforcement of precautionary principle and sustainable development doctrine.
    • Need for cumulative impact assessment in fragile ecosystems.
  2. Disaster Management (GS 3)
    • Anthropogenic triggers amplify natural disasters.
    • Road-cutting destabilizes slopes, increasing landslides.
    • Importance of ecosystem-based disaster risk reduction (Eco-DRR).
  3. Governance (GS 2)
    • Policy contradiction between infrastructure push and NMSHE objectives.
    • Centre-State coordination gaps.
    • Role of judiciary in balancing development and ecology.

Way Forward

  • Adopt context-specific road design standards instead of uniform DL-PS norms.
    • Strengthen scientific EIAs and cumulative ecological assessments.
    • Enforce carrying capacity studies for tourism and pilgrimage.
    • Promote green infrastructure engineering (bio-engineering slope stabilization).
    • Integrate climate adaptation into Himalayan planning frameworks.

UPSC Relevance:
GS 1 – Indian Geography (Himalayan fragility)
GS 2 – Governance & Policy Implementation
GS 3 – Environment, Disaster Management, Climate Change

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