GREAT NICOBAR ISLAND PROJECT – POLITY

News: Great Nicobar Project may see 9.64 lakh trees axed, says Minister

 

What's in the news?

       The Union government’s ambitious ₹72,000-crore Great Nicobar Project may see 9.64 lakh, and not 8.5 lakh, trees felled to enable the construction of a trans-shipment port, an international airport, township development, and a 450 MVA gas and solar-based power plant in the Great Nicobar Island, according to a response by Minister of State (Environment) Ashwini Kumar Choubey in the Rajya Sabha.

 

Key takeaways:

       The Great Nicobar Project, which is likely to come up over 130 square km of pristine forest, has been accorded environmental clearance by an expert committee.

       However, this was challenged by the National Green Tribunal (NGT), following which the NGT constituted an expert committee in April to investigate aspects of the clearance.

 

Great Nicobar Island Project:

       It is a mega project to be implemented at the southern end of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

 

Components:

       ₹35,000 crore transhipment port at Galathea Bay

       Dual-use military-civil international airport - 22 sq. km. airport complex

       Power plant

       Township

       Parallel-to-the-coast mass rapid transport system and

       Free trade zone and warehousing complex on the southwestern coast. 

 

Andaman and Nicobar Islands Integrated Development Corporation (ANIIDCO) will be the nodal agency for the implementation of the Great Nicobar Development plan.

 

Significance:

1. Economic reasons:

       It is equidistant from Colombo to the southwest and Port Klang and Singapore to the southeast.

       It has a potential to become a hub for cargo ships.

2. Strategic & Security reasons:

       Consolidation of the Indian Ocean Region.

       Control Chinese assertion in the Bay of Bengal and the Indo-Pacific.

 

Concerns:

       The project intends to use about 114 sq. km of tribal reserve forest land. According to MoEFCC, 8.5 lakh trees will have to be cut in Great Nicobar for this project.

       The northern end of the project falls in the biosphere reserve.

 

Go back to basics:

Great Nicobar Island:

       Great Nicobar is the southernmost and largest of the Nicobar Islands of India.

       The island of Sumatra is located 180 km to the south of Great Nicobar. It has an area of about 1045 sq. km.

       According to the 2011 census, it has a population of about 8,069. The island is home to one of the most primitive tribes of India - the Shompens.

       The island includes the Great Nicobar Biosphere Reserve (GNBR) comprising the Galathea National Park and the Campbell Bay National Park.

       Indira Point in the Great Nicobar Island is the southernmost point of India’s territory.