2012.01.12 mission gurgaon development (mgd) letter to dgtcp haryana
1. mission®
Reg No: DR/GGN/291 of 2010-11
GURGAON
A people’s movement for good governance
DEVELOPMENT
To,
Shri T C Gupta
Director General-cum-Special Secretary,
Town & Country Planning and Urban Estates Department Haryana
Chandigarh Fax: 0172-2548475
January 12, 2012
Subject: Need to conserve Aravalli hills in Southern Haryana, and especially Faridabad
district for drinking water security and other ecosystem services.
Sir,
We are citizens of the NCR concerned about the ecology of the Aravalli hills and the
drinking water security of Delhi as well as Gurgaon, Faridabad, which have substantial
dependence on groundwater. In fact, Faridabad is almost 100% dependent on ground
water. We write as we are concerned at the risk posed by the Draft Development Plan
(DDP) Mangar 2031, for the drinking water security of Faridabad and Gurgaon. As you
are aware the Haryana Government has issued a notification dated 08.01.2011
empowering your office of the Director General, Town and Country Planning Department
to exercise and perform all powers and functions of Director under the Haryana
Development and Regulation of Urban Areas Act,1975, Punjab Scheduled Roads and
Controlled Areas Restriction and Unregulated Development Act, 1963, Haryana
Apartment Ownership Act,1983 and Punjab New Capital (Periphery) Control Act,1952
and rules framed there under. This place a great responsibility upon you in respect to
environmental concerns of planning and development, land use etc with respect to
Gurgaon and Faridabad Districts which have been highlighted by the Apex Court
recently.
The Aravalli hills (classified as gair mumkin pahar in revenue records) :
(1)
are identified as a recharge zone for groundwater by the Central Ground Water
Board (CGWB) in its reports to the Honourable Supreme Court
(2)
where the groundwater is to the tune of 20,00,000 litres per hectare per year
which is worth Rs 2 lakh per year and has a Net Present Value of upto Rs 2
crores per hectare.
(3)
are zoned as a natural conservation area in the Regional Plan 2021 prepared by
the NCRPB, which Haryana is mandated to follow.
(4)
are a deemed forest area under the Forest Conservation Act
(5)
are the subject matter of banning of “mining activity and pumping of
groundwater”, and mining rehabilitation under WRIT PETITION Civil No.
4677 OF 1985
(6)
and include the catchment of Dhauj lake which is critical for recharge of
groundwater for downstream city and village areas as well as the Dhauj
crusher zone.
543 Sector 23, Gurgaon; Tel: 9312404269, 9818768349, 9871628217; E-mail: missiongurgaondevelopment@gmail.com
Governing Council: Vinay Shankar, Patron, Former Secretary, Govt of India Devinder Chopra, Patron, UN retiree
Maj Gen Satbir Singh, SM, President, Vice Chairman IESM Dr Nalini Bhargava, Vice President, Educationist
Dr Bhawani Shankar Tripathy, General Secretary, Development professional Col Sarvadaman Oberoi, Treasurer, RTI activist
Vakul Cowshik, Member, Social worker
www.missiongurgaondevelopment.org
2. mission®
Reg No: DR/GGN/291 of 2010-11
GURGAON
A people’s movement for good governance
DEVELOPMENT
Accordingly, the Aravalli hills (classified as gair mumkin pahar in revenue records)
should therefore be zoned as a water recharge and forest conservation zone where no
construction is allowed and the same has been categorically held by the Apex Court in
Apex Court Order dated 06.07.2011 in WRIT PETITION Civil No. 202 OF 1995
T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India. Such a zoning for their water
recharge role is critical for the future existence of Faridabad and Gurgaon as well as
protecting the last remaining wilderness and forest zone.
As you may be aware that most of the Aravalli hills in Faridabad District have been
privatized and are currently owned by private parties big and small. Newspaper reports
and other enquiries indicate that these have included Baba Ramdev, politicians,
journalists, bureaucrats as well as real estate and business interests. Opening the Aravalli
hills for real estate will not only be a glaring violation of the Forest Conservation Act,
and various other Supreme Court Judgements, but will also throw the spotlight on
which persons actually own the Aravalli hills and will benefit from real estate
zoning, thus causing them un-necessary embarrassment.
The facts are as follows:
1. The Aravalli hills are the perhaps the oldest mountain systems in the world, nine times
older than the Himalayas and unlike the Himalayas they are very stable and strong.
2. Running north to south, they perform an important function in protecting the NCR region
from the march of the desert – hot winds and sand. An article datelined 24.01.2009 notes,
“Environmentalist and expert in desert sciences Anupam Mishra said: 'These hills are
nine times the geological age of the Himalayas - and unlike the Himalayas they are very
stable and strong. 'The Aravallis control everything, rain, drought and flood, on both
sides, the desert and the fertile plains,' Mishra told IANS. Crucially, they block the sands
of the Thar desert from blowing into the fertile plains of north India. 'But they are not
very high, so people have exploited them for mining and construction. The range is
considered raw material but it is actually a crucial lifeline,' Mishra said. 'There are gaps in
the range at Nimi, near Jaipur, that have developed over the last 50-100 years where the
desert air moves unchecked,' Mishra said. 'The desert is in a sense spilling over. We will
miss the Aravallis only when north India becomes a big desert.' Another
environmentalist, Ahmedabad-based Farhad Contractor, said on phone: 'The hills have
been blasted and drained of their strength with all the mining. And the implementation of
the laws has been pathetic. It is the government that allowed all this. If the Supreme Court
doesn't step in, I fear that will be the case this time as well.' Mishra feared one isolated
Supreme Court (SC) order would not be enough.”
3. Crucially, the Aravalli hills (mostly classified as gair mumkin pahar in revenue records)
are a critical groundwater recharge zone for Delhi, Gurgaon and Faridabad. All three
towns have a high dependence on ground water for drinking water and domestic supplies,
especially Faridabad (100%). This is borne out by CGWB studies. The replenishment of
groundwater through a natural (and augmented) process of infiltration in hydrological
543 Sector 23, Gurgaon; Tel: 9312404269, 9818768349, 9871628217; E-mail: missiongurgaondevelopment@gmail.com
Governing Council: Vinay Shankar, Patron, Former Secretary, Govt of India Devinder Chopra, Patron, UN retiree
Maj Gen Satbir Singh, SM, President, Vice Chairman IESM Dr Nalini Bhargava, Vice President, Educationist
Dr Bhawani Shankar Tripathy, General Secretary, Development professional Col Sarvadaman Oberoi, Treasurer, RTI activist
Vakul Cowshik, Member, Social worker
www.missiongurgaondevelopment.org
3. mission®
Reg No: DR/GGN/291 of 2010-11
GURGAON
A people’s movement for good governance
DEVELOPMENT
recharge zones is critical for the long term ecological sustainability of these towns.
[Environmental Earth Sciences (2010) 60:733–748 Hydrogeological factors: their
association and relationship with seasonal water-table fluctuation in the composite
hardrock Aravalli terrain, India Chandrashekhar Bhuiyan Received: 2 August 2008
/ Accepted: 16 June 2009 / Published online: 4 July 2009 Springer-Verlag 2009] If
the present development scenario continues unchecked news reports have it that CGWB
has predicted that Gurgaon could run dry as early as 2017.
4. A conservative per hectare estimate of this natural and augmented infiltration is that about
33.6% of annual rainfall infiltrates into the ground or 20,00,000 litres per hectare per
year. Valued at a conservative level Rs 0.10 per litre as the value of infiltration, this
amounts to an annual recurring value of Rs 2,00,000 per hectare per year.
5. Applying the priniciple of inter-generational equity and precautionary principle, it is out
duty to protect this land for our future generations and accordingly we value future
recharge of groundwater that will be enjoyed by future generations at the same net present
value as current recharge, with no discounting. Accordingly, the value of groundwater
recharge for the next 100 years is going to be Rs 2 crores / hectare. Given the high
value of recharge, it makes strong ecological and economic sense to zone this area for the
provision of ecosystem services especially as a drinking water rehcharge zone. For your
information, the Shimla drinking water catchment was similarly acquired and protected
about 100 years ago, for the purpose of securing the drinking water supply of Shimla
town.
6. The Regional Plan-2021 of NCR Planning Board also states that the areas surrounding
water bodies “be kept free from anyencroachment/development to allow free flow of
water” (pg 153). The Dhauj lake is already become seasonal and its lake bed has shrunk
considerably from between 1975-76s to 2005-6 as per the Survey of India topographical
maps.
7. While there has been considerable real estate development in the Aravallis especially near
Surajkund, which have been facilitated by dubious zoning proposals in the past, there are
still large chunks that are currently an un-inhabited highland Aravalli plateau, comprising
of gair mumkin pahar land. There is no village abadi in the hills, just a few boundaries
and buildings. Thus it the largest un-fragmented wilderness area that is a habitat for a
variety of flora and fauna in perhaps the entire central NCR region. This includes jackal,
fox, neel gai, monitor lizard, mongoose, porcupines, wild hare, snakes, and perhaps over
hundred bird species. [Refer: Silent botanical disaster engulfing India, Surojit
Mahalanobis, TNN | May 25, 2005Leopard caught near Gurgaon, TNN Mar 9, 2008,
Leopard mowed down on NH-8 near Manesar, Dipak Kumar Dash, TNN | Sep 2, 2008]
8. There are also large patches of natural vegetation including the sacred grove called
Mangar Bani, that is also at risk.
9. Available proposals of the Draft Development Plan (DDP) Mangar 2031 that include
about 9 villages in the Aravalli hills allow about 20 kinds of real estate activities in the
Aravalli hills, including farm houses, by including them in a so-called agricultural zone.
543 Sector 23, Gurgaon; Tel: 9312404269, 9818768349, 9871628217; E-mail: missiongurgaondevelopment@gmail.com
Governing Council: Vinay Shankar, Patron, Former Secretary, Govt of India Devinder Chopra, Patron, UN retiree
Maj Gen Satbir Singh, SM, President, Vice Chairman IESM Dr Nalini Bhargava, Vice President, Educationist
Dr Bhawani Shankar Tripathy, General Secretary, Development professional Col Sarvadaman Oberoi, Treasurer, RTI activist
Vakul Cowshik, Member, Social worker
www.missiongurgaondevelopment.org
4. mission®
Reg No: DR/GGN/291 of 2010-11
GURGAON
A people’s movement for good governance
DEVELOPMENT
10. The attached letter and report from the Deputy Commissioner, Faridabad, Haryana
and signed by the District Forest Officer and other officers and researchers in Faridabad
highlights the importance of the Aravalli hills for a variety of ecological reasons, and
strongly suggests that the Aravallis be instead zoned as a no-build, groundwater
recharge and forest conservation zone.
11. Indiscriminate mining in the region has led to massive destruction of vegetation, both
directly in areas mined, as well as indirectly, due to disturbance around the mining pits.
The stoppage of mining in some areas has given some respite to both flora and fauna.
Damage to bio-diversity is compounded by the two four-lane criss-cross highways
recently sanctioned across the Aravallis, effectively cutting off Asola Wildlife Sanctuary
from the Haryana Aravallis, in clear violation of Apex Court judgments.
12. Mining pits that went below groundwater levels have led to exposure of ground water
which is resulting in huge and continuing evaporation losses of precious
groundwater. In an study of the area, the CGWB has estimated that from a total area of
902418 sq. m of exposed water table, the accumulative loss of 8,86,891 cubic meter fresh
water is occurring each year. At a conservative value of just 10 paise/litre, this is loss is
worth Rs 8.86 crores per year, or Rs 88.6 crores per decade. ( If valued at Rs 1/litre, then
the loss is Rs 886 crores per decade). This calculation does not include the loss from the
massive pumping of groundwater that was undertaken for dewatering the mines when
they were in operation in the years prior to 2002.
13. Under orders from the Supreme Court in WP(Civil) 4677 of 1985, the Ministry of
Environment and Forests is currently reviewing mine rehabilitation plans – both for the
areas directly mined (the pits) as well as the adjacent mining lease areas which suffered
secondary damage. Large areas of Mangar and other villages in the proposed DDP
Mangar 2031 have suffered direct and indirect damage and need to be rehabilitated for the
next several decades. The Government of Haryana has commissioned a comprehensive
rehabilitation plan by WABCOS for Faridabad district. While one arm of the government
is preparing rehabilitation plans that will lock up much of the Aravalli hills for restoration
for the next several decades, zoning such area for real estate activities will be a violation
of both the spirit and letter of Supreme Court orders and especially the current process of
initiating a credible restoration process.
14. Haryana is amongst the laggard Indian states in terms of forest cover. Against the
national policy of 33% forest cover, the state has less than 5% forest cover. Even within
faridabad district, less than 10%-15% of land is under forest cover. Importantly, more
than 75% of the forest cover of the district is concentrated in the aravalli hills. At a time
when the entire district has been declared an urban zone, it is imperitive that existing
forest and wilderness zones are conserved for their ecosystem benefits. The DDP
543 Sector 23, Gurgaon; Tel: 9312404269, 9818768349, 9871628217; E-mail: missiongurgaondevelopment@gmail.com
Governing Council: Vinay Shankar, Patron, Former Secretary, Govt of India Devinder Chopra, Patron, UN retiree
Maj Gen Satbir Singh, SM, President, Vice Chairman IESM Dr Nalini Bhargava, Vice President, Educationist
Dr Bhawani Shankar Tripathy, General Secretary, Development professional Col Sarvadaman Oberoi, Treasurer, RTI activist
Vakul Cowshik, Member, Social worker
www.missiongurgaondevelopment.org
5. mission®
Reg No: DR/GGN/291 of 2010-11
GURGAON
A people’s movement for good governance
DEVELOPMENT
Mangar 2031 possibly includes about 33% of the forest cover of the forest cover of the
district, and zoning it for anything apart from groundwater recharge and forest
conservation will dramatically reduce the forest cover of the district. At a time when
While Delhi and even Rajasthan have protected much of their Aravalli hills and formed
reserve forests and even sanctuaries, Haryana lags behind and hardly 5% of the Aravallis
in Haryana are under long term protection of the government.
15. We would instead suggest, that the approach taken by Delhi of declaring wildlife
sanctuaries in the contiguous zone of Asola and Bhatti wildlife sanctuary, should be
similarly emulated across the border in Faridabad and Gurgaon districts. Alternate
provisions of the wild life protection act – such as community reserves, conservation
reserves and national parks may also be considered. Once the tenure and zoning is
secured, then the healing touch of time may be supported by restoration interventions by
specialist institutions and under supervision of Forest Departments.
16. In Compliance of its judgment / order dated 06.07.2011 in WRIT PETITION Civil No.
202 OF 1995 T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India the Apex Court had
directed that by 06.01.2012 the MoEF shall file its compliance report on Part II, namely:
“(ii)...comply with the Office Memorandum dated 26.4.2011 issued by the
MoEF which requires that all mining projects involving forests and for
such non-mining projects which involve more than 40 hectares of forests,
the project proponent shall submit the documents which have been
enumerated in the said Memorandum. (iii) If the project proponent
makes a claim regarding status of the land being non-forest and if there is
any doubt the site shall be inspected by the State Forest Department
along with the Regional Office of MoEF to ascertain the status of forests,
based on which the certificate in this regard be issued. In all such cases, it
would be desirable for the representative of State Forest Department to
assess the Expert Appraisal Committee. (vi) ...Regional Offices of the
MoEF, to facilitate detailed/in-depth scrutiny of the proposals involving
diversion of forest area more than 5 hectares and up to 40 hectares and all
proposals relating to mining and encroachments up to 40 hectares. (vii)
Creation and regular updating of a GIS based decision support database,
tentatively containing inter-alia the district-wise details of the location
and boundary of (i) each plot of land that may be defined as forest for the
purpose of the Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980; (ii) the core, buffer and
eco-sensitive zone of the protected areas constituted as per the provisions
of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972; (iii) the important migratory
corridors for wildlife; and (iv) the forest land diverted for non-forest
543 Sector 23, Gurgaon; Tel: 9312404269, 9818768349, 9871628217; E-mail: missiongurgaondevelopment@gmail.com
Governing Council: Vinay Shankar, Patron, Former Secretary, Govt of India Devinder Chopra, Patron, UN retiree
Maj Gen Satbir Singh, SM, President, Vice Chairman IESM Dr Nalini Bhargava, Vice President, Educationist
Dr Bhawani Shankar Tripathy, General Secretary, Development professional Col Sarvadaman Oberoi, Treasurer, RTI activist
Vakul Cowshik, Member, Social worker
www.missiongurgaondevelopment.org
6. mission®
Reg No: DR/GGN/291 of 2010-11
GURGAON
A people’s movement for good governance
DEVELOPMENT
purpose in the past in the district. The Survey of India toposheets in
digital format, the forest cover maps prepared by the Forest Survey of
India in preparation of the successive State of Forest Reports and the
conditions stipulated in the approvals accorded under the Forest
(Conservations) Act, 1980 for each case of diversion of forest land in the
district will also be part of the proposed decision support database…..
16.
33. Part II of our order gives guidelines to be followed by the Central
Government, State Government and the various authorities under the
Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980 and the Environment (Protection) Act,
1986. These guidelines are to be implemented in all future cases. These
guidelines are required to be given so that fait accompli situations do not
recur. We have issued these guidelines in the light of our experience in the
last couple of years. These guidelines will operate in all future cases of
environmental and forest clearances till a regulatory mechanism is put in
place. On the implementation of these Guidelines, MoEF will file its
compliance report within six months.”
The Sultanpur Bird Sanctuary has been given protection in that no development is
permitted by Haryana Government within 5 kms zone with certain exceptions. The
compliance not yet having been filed in T.N. Godavarman, does not permit of gross
violation of norms of no mining or industrial activity within 10 kms of water bodies/
lakes in Gurgaon or Faridabad Districts. [Refer A.P. POLLUTION CONTROL
BOARD II V. PROF. M.V. NAYUDU 2000 5 Suppl.SCR 249 2001 2 SCC 62] or
development of urban habitat in the Aravallis. In WP No 4677 of 1985 MC Mehta v
UOI the Apex Court in Order dated 18 Mar 2004 held:
“87. Having examined the matter, we are of the view that though the
study conducted by CMPDI relates to mining activity in Aravalli Hills in
Gurgaon district, in public interest the general safeguards and
suggestions in that report deserve to be implemented in respect of mining
in Faridabad district as well.”
17.
In WP No 4677 of 1985 MC Mehta v UOI the Apex Court in Order 08 May 2009
held:
“20. At this stage, we may also note that under Section 13(2)(qq) of 1957
Act, Rules have been framed for rehabilitation of flora and other
vegetation destroyed by reason of any prospecting or mining
operations...The most important aspect of the above guideline is making
of a Rehabilitation Plan....21. None of the above provisions have been
complied with. In the circumstance, by the present order, we hereby
suspend all mining operations in the Aravalli Hill Range falling in the
State of Haryana within the area of approximately 448 sq. kms. in the
543 Sector 23, Gurgaon; Tel: 9312404269, 9818768349, 9871628217; E-mail: missiongurgaondevelopment@gmail.com
Governing Council: Vinay Shankar, Patron, Former Secretary, Govt of India Devinder Chopra, Patron, UN retiree
Maj Gen Satbir Singh, SM, President, Vice Chairman IESM Dr Nalini Bhargava, Vice President, Educationist
Dr Bhawani Shankar Tripathy, General Secretary, Development professional Col Sarvadaman Oberoi, Treasurer, RTI activist
Vakul Cowshik, Member, Social worker
www.missiongurgaondevelopment.org
7. mission®
Reg No: DR/GGN/291 of 2010-11
GURGAON
A people’s movement for good governance
DEVELOPMENT
Districts of Faridabad and Gurgaon including Mewat till Reclamation
Plan duly certified by State of Haryana, MoEF and CEC is prepared in
accordance with the above statutory provisions contained in various
enactments enumerated above as well as in terms of the Rules framed
thereunder and the guidelines.”
18.
In all these orders the Apex Court has referred to the Aravalli Ranges as deemed
forest to be protected from mining, which is inter alia permitted with safeguards in
the Aravallis – by no stretch of the imagination, Haryana Government could read
into this deemed forest order any latitude for urban development planning within
the Apex Court protected area of the Aravalli Ranges. In a deemed forest there
simply cannot be urban development or even farmhouses on urban pattern as
widely seen in Delhi Aravallis.
19.
You are therefore requested to withhold the Mangar Development Plan and
any other development activities in Aravalli Ranges till filing of compliance by
MoEF vide para 33 of judgment / order of Apex Court dated 06.07.2011 in WRIT
PETITION Civil No. 202 OF 1995 T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of
India.
Yours Sincerely
Lt Col(Retd) S.S. Oberoi
Treasurer
Mission Gurgaon Development
Copy to:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Chairperson, Central Empowered Committee, of the Honourable Supreme Court
Secretary, Ministry of Environment, Government of India
Dr PJ Dilipkumar, Director General Forests and Special Secretary, MoEF
Financial Commissioner & Principal Secretary Town & Country Planning Haryana,
Fax 0172-2714011
5. Chief Secretary to Government Haryana, Fax 0172-2740317
6. Deputy Commissioner, Faridabad.
543 Sector 23, Gurgaon; Tel: 9312404269, 9818768349, 9871628217; E-mail: missiongurgaondevelopment@gmail.com
Governing Council: Vinay Shankar, Patron, Former Secretary, Govt of India Devinder Chopra, Patron, UN retiree
Maj Gen Satbir Singh, SM, President, Vice Chairman IESM Dr Nalini Bhargava, Vice President, Educationist
Dr Bhawani Shankar Tripathy, General Secretary, Development professional Col Sarvadaman Oberoi, Treasurer, RTI activist
Vakul Cowshik, Member, Social worker
www.missiongurgaondevelopment.org