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Greed is killing the Himalayas, dams to Dhams. Dharali is paying the price
Greed is killing the Himalayas, dams to Dhams. Dharali is paying the price

The Print

time3 days ago

  • General
  • The Print

Greed is killing the Himalayas, dams to Dhams. Dharali is paying the price

Infrastructure development is necessary in the mountains, but not at a pace and manner that threatens the ecological balance and disrupts the delicate ecosystem. The Supreme Court had warned that the state of Himachal Pradesh may 'vanish' if we continue to meddle with nature in the name of development. The upper areas of the hillock that virtually dissolved in the cloudburst—although by some accounts it was just incessant rain—could be attributed to several tonnes of soil excavated and dumped into the Kheer Ganga river that was quietly flowing into Dharali. Thousands of trees, whose roots were holding the loose soil and preventing erosion, were reportedly cut down to construct a two-lane state highway in the hills, meant to benefit the tourism industry somewhere in the upper reaches of the mountain. The initial reports of the flash flood that devastated Dharali village in Uttarkashi, Uttarakhand, attribute the tragedy to a cloudburst, which is not unusual in the mountains, especially during monsoon. While this might explain the volume of water, the massive mountain of silt and clay that flattened the village appears to be largely man-made. Also Read: Flash floods due to heavy rainfall in Uttarkashi's Dharali, but IMD yet to confirm 'cloudburst' Fragile beginnings Natural imbalance leading to disasters can happen anywhere, including coastal areas, but the Himalayas are more vulnerable. In just over three years, from January 2022 to March 2025, the fragile Himalayan region saw extreme weather events on 822 out of 1,186 days, according to data from India's Atlas on Weather Disasters, compiled by the Centre for Science and Environment and Down to Earth. In total, 2,863 people were killed in 13 Himalayan states and Union territories. Several studies pertaining to the formation of the Himalayas, their ecological vulnerabilities, and possible sustainable solutions are being conducted. The fragility of the range lies not just in recent ecological damage, but also in its geological volatility. The Himalayas are considered geologically young, as the mountain range and the Tibetan plateau were formed from the collision between the Indian Plate and the Eurasian Plate, which began nearly 50 million years ago. As the southern landmass drifted northward, the Indian continental plate slowed to around 4-6 cm per year. This slowdown is believed to mark the beginning of the collision of the plates, the closing of the former Tethys Ocean, and the initiation of Himalayan uplift. Some geologists suggest that Proto-India detached from the south-eastern margin of Africa and began to drift slowly northward until the Eurasian landmass intercepted it. The present Himalayan mountain range rose from the resulting faulting during this massive collision, which occurred in the latter part of the Tertiary Period. Fossil records show a massive spread of Eurasian fauna across the Indian landmass. The tremendous energy released by this collision gradually dissipated, giving rise to some of Asia's most distinctive geographical features, including the compression of the Tibetan Plateau, the distortion of Asia's southern margin, and even the Annamite mountain range in Indochina. According to research findings, the Deccan Plate is still 'inexorably moving northward', resulting in both Tibet and the Inner Himalayas being pushed upward even today. The Himalayas are drained by 19 major rivers, of which the Indus and the Brahmaputra are the largest, each having mountain catchment basins of about 260,000 sq km. Five of the 19 rivers, with a total catchment area of about 132,000 sq km, belong to the Indus system—the Jhelum, the Chenab, the Ravi, the Beas, and the Sutlej—and collectively define the vast region divided between Punjab state in India and Punjab province in Pakistan. Of the remaining rivers, nine belong to the Ganges system, and three to the Brahmaputra system. Glaciers also play an important role in draining the higher elevations and in feeding the Himalayan rivers. When this drainage system is disrupted, the consequences can be swift and catastrophic downstream. Also Read: Linking trade and geopolitics will hurt US more than India Put Himalayas above greed Since time immemorial, for millions of Indians all over the world, Himalaya, literally meaning the 'temple of snow', is not just a mountain but the abode of the Gods, regarded and revered as one of the gateways to salvation. Being the largest and highest of the mountain ranges, it is diverse in geology, ecology, communities, traditions, and heritage. Its natural timberline elevations are higher at the south-facing slopes, with altitudes differing by up to several hundred metres, affecting solar impact and radiation. Naturally, the sunny slopes are much more utilised for inhabitation, cultivation, and pastoral use. Over the years, increasing habitation and seasonal influx of people, tourists, and illegal settlers have resulted in a disproportionate increase in population, unplanned urbanisation, ecologically damaging infrastructure development, and unrestricted tourist influx. There's an increasing threat to both its environment and socio-economic balance. The ecological diversity in the Himalayan region plays a critical role in maintaining integration, interdependence, and sustainability of ecosystems. This can no longer be overlooked. As a precautionary measure, all ongoing hydel projects should be suspended, and a serious review of the ecological damage should be conducted before re-starting them. Desilting work must be undertaken before the monsoon arrives, and this needs to be done with the help of machines to cover more area in less time and with better efficiency. The political class, which depends on corrupt contractors for such crucial work, cannot escape blame for the havoc and loss of life caused by flash floods. Pilgrimages like the Char Dham Yatra have continued for centuries without turning into tourism. The Himalayan states must work together to segregate these two social activities, instead of giving in to the lure of linking them. The extreme greed to extract commercial dividends from religion can be detrimental in the long run. During its G20 presidency, India effectively showcased its worldview of vasudhaiva kutumbakam (the world is one family) and linked it to the Sustainable Development Goals. India's own development paradigm is built on a template of sustainability, aligned with the G20's priorities: green development, climate finance, and Life Style For Environment (LiFE); accelerated, inclusive, and resilient growth; accelerating progress on SDGs; technological transformation and digital public infrastructure; multilateral institutions for the 21st century; and women-led development. While all these objectives are important for sustainable growth, the first one—green development, climate finance, and LiFE—is of greater salience and urgency, especially in the context of maintaining balance between utility and preservation of the natural boundaries of India: the oceans and the mountains, more importantly, the Himalayas. Let us not allow politics and commerce to play with them. Seshadri Chari is the former editor of 'Organiser'. He tweets @seshadrichari. Views are personal. (Edited by Asavari Singh)

Climate change reshapes Uttarakhand agriculture, pulses stay resilient: Report
Climate change reshapes Uttarakhand agriculture, pulses stay resilient: Report

India Today

time03-05-2025

  • General
  • India Today

Climate change reshapes Uttarakhand agriculture, pulses stay resilient: Report

Pulses and spices are emerging as the backbone of hill agriculture in Uttarakhand, as farmers adapt to the mounting challenges posed by climate change. Once dominated by the cultivation of wheat, paddy, and potatoes, hill agriculture is undergoing a significant transformation, with climate-resilient crops like chickpea, pigeon pea, turmeric, and chilli witnessing a boom in both cultivation area and yield.A new analysis titled Water and Heat Stress in the Hills: How Climate Change is Shaping Uttarakhand's Agriculture Landscape by Climate Trends reveals a 27.2 per cent decline in total cultivated land and a 15.2 per cent drop in overall yield over the past impact is most severe on food grains and oilseeds, which have lost 27 per cent of cropland in the hills. Wheat cultivation has declined by 4.63 per cent, with paddy and other millets showing similar downward trends. Meanwhile, pulses and spices are emerging as climate-resilient alternatives, with significant increases in both cultivation area and AND SPICES EMERGE AS RESILIENT CROPSPulses such as chickpea and pigeon pea are seeing increased cultivation. GI-tagged crops like pahadi toor (pigeon pea), gahat (horse gram), kala bhatt (black soybean), and chana (chickpea) are gaining popularity due to their resilience to water stress and low input requirements.'Pulses, particularly black soyabeans and horse gram, are adapting better to the changing climatic conditions than paddy and wheat, which are more water intensive,' says Jogendra Bisht, President of Lok Chetna cultivation is also booming. Turmeric cultivation has more than doubled over the past decade, while chilli production has increased by 35 per cent. Overall, spice cultivation in the state has grown by 50 per cent, with a 10.5 per cent rise in yields between 2016 and PRODUCTION CRASHED BY 70%One of the starkest indicators of the shift is the collapse in potato production, the 'king of vegetables', suited for cooler a staple hill crop, potato yields dropped by 70.82 per cent in five years -- from 367,309 metric tonnes in 2020-21 to 107,150 metric tonnes in 2023-24. Almora and Rudraprayag districts witnessed the steepest area under potato cultivation also fell by 36.4 per cent between 2020 and 2023. Experts point to reduced snowfall, erratic rainfall, rising temperatures, and frequent hail as key contributors to the decline.'Potatoes in the hills are entirely rain-fed,' explains Dr Anil Kumar of Krishi Vigyan Kendra, Udham Singh Nagar. 'Rainfall has become increasingly erratic, and reduced snowfall between October and January has critically impacted soil moisture and yields.'ERRACTIC WEATHER CONDITIONS AMPLIFIES THE SHIFTAs per India's Atlas on Weather Disasters, Uttarakhand recorded 94 extreme weather days in 2023, damaging 44,882 hectares of rainfall, poor winter precipitation, and rising temperatures have made traditional crops increasingly difficult to sustain. Experts say this shift in weather patterns has accelerated the move toward drought-tolerant and lower-input crops like pulses and farmers, with support from Krishi Vigyan Kendras, are now adopting drought-resistant varieties and rethinking crop choices to safeguard their Vigyan Kendras said that a focus on introducing drought-tolerant varieties of pigeon pea and other crops capable of withstanding prolonged dry Watch IN THIS STORY#Uttarakhand

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