DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (OCTOBER 07, 2022)

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

1. INDIA ABSTAINS ON SRI LANKA VOTE AT UN HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL

THE CONTEXT: Recently India abstained from voting on a resolution on Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council, while observing that Sri Lanka’s progress in implementing commitments on the 13th Amendment, meaningful devolution and early provincial elections remains “inadequate”.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • According to India’s statement,“Achieving prosperity for all Sri Lankans and realising the legitimate aspirations of Tamils of Sri Lanka for prosperity, dignity and peace are two sides of the same coin”.
  • As an immediate neighbour, India has “substantively contributed” to the relief, rehabilitation, resettlement and reconstruction process in Sri Lanka after 2009 and more recently provided “unprecedented assistance” to the people of Sri Lanka to face the challenges of the recent economic crisis, India had abstained last year, too (2021).
  • Further, India has “taken note” of the Sri Lankan government’s commitments on the implementation of commitments “in the spirit of the 13th Constitutional Amendment”, meaningful devolution and the early conduct of provincial elections, Also, underscoring India’s long-standing concern over power devolution in Sri Lanka, an issue that also found mention in the resolution.

What is the legislation?

  • It is an outcome of the Indo-Lanka Accord of July 1987, signed by the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and President J.R. Jayawardene, in an attempt to resolve Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict that had aggravated into a full-fledged civil war, between the armed forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which led the struggle for Tamils’ self-determination and sought a separate state.
  • The 13th Amendment, which led to the creation of Provincial Councils, assured a power sharing arrangement to enable all nine provinces in the country, including Sinhala majority areas, to self-govern.
  • Subjects such as education, health, agriculture, housing, land and police are devolved to the provincial administrations, but because of restrictions on financial powers and overriding powers given to the President, the provincial administrations have not made much headway.
  • In particular, the provisions relating to police and land have never been implemented. Initially, the north and eastern provinces were merged and had a North-Eastern Provincial Council, but the two were de-merged in 2007 following a Supreme Court verdict.

Why is the 13th Amendment significant?

  • Till date, the 13th Amendment represents the only constitutional provision on the settlement of the long-pending Tamil question. In addition to assuring a measure of devolution, it is considered part of the few significant gains since the 1980s, in the face of growing Sinhala-Buddhist majoritarianism from the time Sri Lanka became independent in 1948.

ENVIRONMENT, ECOLOGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

2. WHAT IS GRAP AND HOW ARE ITS MEASURES TO COMBAT DELHI-NCR’S AIR POLLUTION DIFFERENT THIS YEAR?

THE CONTEXT: Recently, the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) that measures under ‘Stage-1’ of the Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) will be enforced in the NCR with immediate effect.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The order came after Delhi’s AQI deteriorated to be in the ‘poor’ category .Other parts of the NCR, including Gurgaon, Noida and Greater Noida, also recorded ‘poor’ air quality.

What is the Graded Response Action Plan?

  • GRAP is a set of emergency measures that kick in to prevent further deterioration of air quality once it reaches a certain threshold. Stage 1 of GRAP is activated when the AQI is in the ‘poor’ category (201 to 300), and for instance, the AQI in Delhi was 211.
  • The second, third and fourth stages will be activated three days ahead of the AQI reaching the ‘very poor’ category (301 to 400), ‘severe’ category (401 to 450) and ‘severe +’ category (above 450) respectively. For this, the CAQM is relying on air quality and meteorological forecasts by the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) and the India Meteorological Department (IMD).
  • Measures being imposed under the previous categories will continue even when the subsequent category is activated, that is, if measures under Stage-2 are activated, measures under Stage-1 will continue to remain in place.

How is the GRAP different this year?

  • The CAQM revised the Graded Response Action Plan earlier this year. The GRAP was first notified in January 2017 by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change. This was based on a plan that was submitted by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) in November 2016.
  • According to the notification, the task of implementing the GRAP fell on the now dissolved Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority for the NCR. From 2021 onwards, the GRAP is being implemented by the CAQM.
  • In the version of the GRAP that was notified in 2017, measures kicked in after pollution concentrations reached a certain level. This year, measures are pre-emptive and will kick in based on forecasts in an attempt to prevent the AQI from deteriorating further. The older version of the GRAP was enforced based only on the concentration of PM2.5 and PM10.
  • This year, GRAP is being enforced based on the AQI, which takes other pollutants also into account, such as ozone, sulphur dioxide and oxides of nitrogen.

What are the measures that will be enforced this year?

  • Some of the measures in the revised GRAP are also different this year. For the first time, it specifies that State governments in the NCR may impose restrictions on BS-III petrol and BS-IV diesel four wheelers under Stage-3, or when the AQI is likely to reach the ‘severe’ category.
  • In the ‘severe +’ category, GRAP imposes a ban on plying of four-wheelers in Delhi and NCR districts bordering Delhi, except for BS-VI vehicles and those plying for emergency or essential services. Under this category, there will also be a ban on the movement of Delhi registered, diesel-operated medium and heavy goods vehicles in Delhi, with exceptions for those carrying essential commodities or providing essential services.
  • Restrictions on some construction activities will also set in earlier in the revised GRAP. A ban on construction activities (except for those involving railways, projects of national security, hospitals, metro services, and linear public projects like highways, roads) will be imposed under the ‘severe’ category. In the previous plan, the construction ban was implemented only in the ‘severe +’ category.
  • Construction activities on linear public projects like highways, roads, flyovers, pipelines and power transmission, will be banned under the ‘severe +’ category this year.

What are some other measures being considered

  • Under the ‘severe +’ category, State governments may consider additional emergency measures like the closure of schools, plying of vehicles on an odd-even basis, and decide on allowing public, municipal and private offices to work on 50% strength and the rest to work from home.

What are citizens required to do?

  • The revised GRAP also has a set of measures for the public to follow – under the ‘poor’ category, this includes keeping vehicle engines tuned, ensuring PUC certificates are updated and switching off vehicle engines at red lights. Under the ‘very poor’ category, it is suggested that citizens use public transport and replace air filters in their automobiles.
  • Under the ‘severe’ category, a recommendation is made to work from home if possible, and not use coal and wood for heating. Under the ‘severe +’ category, GRAP advises people with chronic diseases and children and the elderly to avoid outdoor activities.

VALUE ADDITION:

About the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM):

  • The Commission was first formed by an ordinance in October 2020.
  • The erstwhile Environment Pollution (Prevention and Control) Authority, or EPCA had been dissolved to make way for the Commission.
  • The Commission will be a statutory authority.
  • The Commission will supersede bodies such as the central and state pollution control boards of Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, UP and Rajasthan.
  • In 2021, the Parliament approved the Commission for Air Quality Management in National Capital Region and Adjoining Areas Bill.

Composition:

Chairperson: To be chaired by a government official of the rank of Secretary or Chief Secretary.

  • The chairperson will hold the post for three years or until s/he attains the age of 70 years.
  • It will have members from several Ministries as well as representatives from the stakeholder States.
  • It will have experts from the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and Civil Society.

GOVERNMENT SCHEMES IN NEWS

3. ANIMAL ADOPTION SCHEME

THE CONTEXT: Recently, the National Zoological Park has come up with an amazing animal adoption scheme which will offer the animal lovers to participate in wildlife conservation. In this scheme, zoos offer the zoo animals/animal species in their collection to the general public for taking care of them.

THE EXPLANATION:

How does an Animal Adoption Scheme Work?

  • To adopt an animal, there is a form available on the official website of National Zoological Park. Any interested individual can choose which animals would interest them and pay for their care by entering into an agreement with zoo management after filling up the application form. The payment may be paid by Account Payee Cheque, Demand Draft, Credit or Debit Card to the National Zoological Park, New Delhi.
  • After the successful registration, the adapter will get a membership card mentioning his name and animal name. After getting the membership card, the adopter will be allowed to enter the zoo during visiting hours once every month on showing the card. It should be noted that visits of adopters may be stopped during any outbreak of a pandemic or zoonotic disease, etc.

What is the rate list for adopting animals?

  • The rates for adopting animals will be depending on the species and the approval for the same is still awaited. The starting range for adopting birds can be from Rs. 700 and Rs 6,00,000  for lions, tigers, rhinos and elephants while the cost for adopting leopards is Rs. 3,60,000 per year.

What is the validity of an adoption membership card?

  • According to the notice released by the zoo authorities, the adoption of zoo animals will be for one or two years which can be withdrawn but the payable amount will not be refunded. The revenue generated from the animal adoptions scheme will go back to the zoo on a quarterly basis for the welfare activities for the animals and its personnel.

THE PRELIMS PERSPECTIVE

4. WHAT IS MOONLIGHTING?

THE CONTEXT: In July 2022, Kotak Securities said in a study that at least 60% of 400 employees surveyed said they themselves had or knew someone who had engaged in moonlighting.

THE EXPLANATION:

What is meant by Moonlighting?

  • Moonlighting or employees working for remuneration with entities other than their employers — has been a hot topic in recent months.  During the pandemic, those with desk jobs had more time on their hands and thus it was easier to take on a few projects outside of work.

What does the law say?

  • Moonlighting is not defined in any of the statutes in India, no Constitutional Court has rendered a decision on the subject”.
  • However, there are enactments that deal with double employment. Section 60 of the Factories Act deals with restriction on double employment stating that “No adult worker shall be required or allowed to work in any factory on any day on which he has already been working in any other factory, save in such circumstances as may be prescribed”. However, this enactment is applicable only to employees working in factories.
  • There are State enactments which deal with employment of persons working in offices, banks, shops, etc. In Tamil Nadu, it is termed as “The Tamil Nadu Shops & Establishments Act, 1947”. However, there is no provision wherein dealing with dual employment.
  • However, moonlighting is subject to law of the land. Experts refers to the Supreme Court’s observation in the case of Glaxo Laboratories (I) Limited vs Labour Court, Meerut and others. The apex court held that “The employer has hardly any extra territorial jurisdiction. He is not the custodian of general law and order situation nor the Guru or mentor of his workmen for their well-regulated cultural advancement.
  • If the power to regulate the behavior of the workmen outside the duty hours and at any place wherever they may be was conferred upon the employer, contract of service may be reduced to contract of slavery.” This case was not specifically about moonlighting but the court’s observation gives us an idea as to how the law may view such cases. Moonlighting is subject to law of the land.
  • The sphere of employment cannot be extended by the employer beyond working hours and outside his place of employment, which is the principle laid down in the above judgment. In other words, the employee can choose to arrange his affairs as he pleases beyond the working hours of the employer.

5. WHO WAS BEGUM SAMRU, THE NAUTCH-GIRL TURNED RULER OF SARDHANA

THE CONTEXT: The first week of October is said to mark the 200th anniversary of the completion of the Basilica of Our Lady of Graces, one of India’s minor basilicas situated in Sardhana in Uttar Pradesh.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • It was constructed in 1822 by Begum Samru, a woman of humble origins that came to be popularly known as the only Catholic queen of India. For the bicentennial celebration of the church’s completion, the life and times of this remarkable figure that began her life as a concubine, and died as one of India’s richest and most powerful women.

Who was Begum Samru?

  • Begum Samru (1750’s – 1836) was a figure that defied any fixed identity. She was a Muslim who converted to Catholicism, a nautch-girl (dancing girl) who became a warrior and an aristocrat, and was described by her contemporaries as dressing more like a man than a woman, sporting a dark turban and ever-puffing away at a hookah.
  • She was a shrewd leader who was able to find a favourable position in the ever-dynamic political terrain of 18th century northern India. While she had first supported the waning Mughal empire, from the 1790’s the Begum began to provide service to the rising Marathas, before joining the British to ensure that she could maintain her landholding rights if they emerged victorious.
  • Some sources claim that Begum Samru, birth name Farzana, was born to a second wife of a poor noblemen in present day Meerut, while others claim she was of Kashmiri descent. She spent her early years as a nautch (dancing girl) in a tawaif’s (courtesan) kotha (household) in Delhi.

MISCELLANEOUS

6. NOBEL PRIZE IN LITERATURE 2022: ANNIE ERNAUX, BEARING WITNESS TO WOMEN’S EXPERIENCES AND MEMORY

THE CONTEXT: The Nobel Prize for Literature 2022 has gone to French author Annie Ernaux, for, according to the Swedish Academy, “the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements and collective restraints of personal memory”.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Ernaux, 82, has seen a sharp increase in popularity in the English-speaking world since 2019, after her seminal work ‘The Years’, translated by Alison L Strayer, was shortlisted for the Man Booker international prize. Her book on her illegal abortion in the 1960s, ‘Happening’ (first published in 2001) has also been in the limelight after abortion rights were curtailed in the US.
  • As the Nobel citation says, Ernaux’s work — ranging from a history of France to her first sexual experience and the shame around it to her mother’s illness and death to her abortion to her class-linked shame – meticulously mines her own memory and life experiences with “courage and clinical acuity”.
  • Her treatment of her memories is unsparing but unembellished – she travels back to the moment she is writing about as completely as possible, without giving herself the benefit and wisdom of hindsight, putting on paper the raw vulnerability of the moment. As anchors, she uses songs, slogans, meals from the time she is writing about, which many say blurs the line between fiction and autobiography.

THE PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

QUESTION OF THE DAY

1.Consider the following statements about Pharmaceutical Export Promotion Council of India (Pharmexcil):

  1. It is a statutory body.
  2. It is set up by Ministry of Commerce and Industry for promotion of pharmaceutical exports from India.
  3. Its headquarter is located in Hyderabad.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

a) 1 and 2 only

b) 2 only

c) 2 and 3 only

d) 1 and 3 only

Answer: C

Explanation:

Pharmaceutical Export Promotion Council of India (Pharmexcil)

  • It is the authorized agency of the government of India for promotion of pharmaceutical exports from India.
  • It was set up under the provisions of Foreign Trade Policy by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry in May 2004.
  • Various pharmaceutical products, namely, bulk drugs, formulations, Biotech Products, Indian Systems of medicines, herbal products, diagnostics, clinical research, etc. are covered under its purview.
  • Pharmexcil takes up several external trade promotion activities by organizing trade delegations outside India, arranging buyer-seller meetings, international seminars, etc.
  • The agency’s headquarters is located in Hyderabad.



Day-303 | Daily MCQs | UPSC Prelims | POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

[WpProQuiz 348]




TOPIC : FOREST FIRES NATURAL HAZARD OR MANMADE DISASTER

THE CONTEXT: Australia has declared a state of emergency for the state of New South Wales (NSW) along with a catastrophic fire warning the highest level of bush fire danger in light of widespread bushfires that have left at least three people dead. Bushfires are a routine occurrence in the country, but this bushfire season is believed to be the worst and has started even before the beginning of the Southern Hemisphere summer.

PRESENT ISSUE OF FOREST FIRE

AMAZON FOREST FIRE

  • The Amazon rainforest, which is home to a fifth of the world’s land species and more than 30 million people, including hundreds of indigenous people, experienced the third-worst forest fires in the last ten years.
  • The region has experienced more than 74,155 fires since January, according to data from Brazil’s National Institute of Space Research (INPE).
  • In 2019 September 19,925 fires broke out, 19.6 per cent less than the number of fire outbreaks same period last year, according to the latest INPE data. In September 2018, there were 24,803 outbreaks in the Amazon.

CALIFORNIA FIRE

  • Brush fire in Ventura county, north of Los Angeles, grew rapidly on Friday, even as calmer winds have allowed fire crews to increase containment of other wildfires plaguing California.
  • The forest fire in California is frequently in a year.

BANDIPUR NATIONAL PARK

  • A five-day fire that raged through the Bandipur Tiger Reserve has reportedly burnt more than 15,400 acres of forests.
  • Between February 21 and 25, 2019 the reserve saw 127 fire counts in various ranges of the 912 sq km forest.

FOREST FIRE

  • The most common hazard in forests is forests fire. Forests fires are as old as the forests themselves. They pose a threat not only to the forest wealth but also to the entire regime to fauna and flora seriously disturbing the bio-diversity and the ecology and environment of a region.
  • During summer, when there is no rain for months, the forests become littered with dry senescent leaves and twinges, which could burst into flames ignited by the slightest spark.
  • The Himalayan forests, particularly, Garhwal Himalayas have been burning regularly during the last few summers, with colossal loss of vegetation cover of that region.
  • Forest fire causes imbalances in nature and endangers biodiversity by reducing faunal and floral wealth. Traditional methods of fire prevention are not proving effective and it is now essential to raise public awareness on the matter, particularly among those people who live close to or in forested areas.

CAUSES OF FOREST FIRE

Causes of forest fires can be divided into two broad categories

  1. Environmental (which are beyond control) and
  2. Human related (which are controllable).

Environmental causes

  • Are largely related to climatic conditions such as temperature, wind speed and direction, level of moisture in soil and atmosphere and duration of dry spells.
  • Other natural causes are the friction of bamboos swaying due to high wind velocity and rolling stones that result in sparks setting off fires in highly inflammable leaf litter on the forest floor.

Human related causes

Result from human activity as well as methods of forest management.  These can be intentional or unintentional, for example:

  • Graziers and gatherers of various forest products starting small fires to obtain good grazing grass as well as to facilitate gathering of minor forest produce like flowers of Madhuca indica and leaves of Diospyros melanoxylon
  • The centuries old practice of shifting cultivation (especially in the North-Eastern region of India and in parts of the States of Orissa and Andhra Pradesh). etc..

Classification of Forest Fire Forest fire can broadly be classified into three categories;

  1. Natural or controlled forest fire.
  2. Forest fires caused by heat generated in the litter and other biomes in summer through carelessness of people (human neglect) and
  3. Forest fires purposely caused by local inhabitants.

Types of Forest Fire: There are two types of forest fire

  1. Surface Fire and
  2. Crown Fire

Surface Fire

  • A forest fire may burn primarily as a surface fire, spreading along the ground as the surface litter (senescent leaves and twigs and dry grasses etc) on the forest floor and is engulfed by the spreading flames.

Crown Fire

  • The other type of forest fire is a crown fire in which the crown of trees and shrubs burn, often sustained by a surface fire.
  • A crown fire is particularly very dangerous in a coniferous forest because resinous material given off burning logs burn furiously.
  • On hill slopes, if the fire starts downhill, it spreads up fast as heated air adjacent to a slope tends to flow up the slope spreading flames along with it. If the fire starts uphill, there is less likelihood of it spreading downwards.

EFFECT OF FOREST FIRE

Fires are a major cause of forest degradation and have wide ranging adverse ecological, economic and social impacts, including:

  • Loss of valuable timber resources
  • Degradation of catchment areas
  • Loss of biodiversity and extinction of plants and animals
  • Loss of wildlife habitat and depletion of wildlife
  • Loss of natural regeneration and reduction in forest cover
  • Global warming etc…

VARIOUS INITIATIVES

MoEFCC guidelines

MoEFCC issued a set of national guidelines for forest fire prevention and control in 2000. These guidelines call for:

  • Identification and mapping of all fire prone areas,
  • Compilation and analysis of database on forest fire damages,
  • Development and installation of fire damage rating system and fire forecasting system,
  • All preventive measures to be taken before the beginning of the fire season

National Master Plan for Forest Fire Control

The main objectives are:

  • To strengthen the organizations responsible for forest fire management
  • To coordinate international transfer of technology and training in the field of forest fire management
  • Creation of a strong database for: number of fires, area burnt, damage to flora and fauna, effect of fire on land and soil and measures taken
  • Assessment of ecological, social, and economic impact of fires
  • Strong national extension strategy for people’s awareness and their participation in forest fire management through Joint Forest Management and NGOs

Forest Fire Prevention and Management Scheme

In 2017, Intensification of Forest Management Scheme was revised and replaced as Forest Fire Prevention & Management Scheme. The main objectives of the scheme are as follows:

  • Minimise forest fire incidences and help in restoring productivity of forests in affected areas
  • Encourage partnership with forest fringe communities for forest protection
  • Prepare fire danger rating system and devise forest fire forecasting system

Pre-Warning Alert System

  • Forest Survey of India has developed Pre-Warning Alert System.
  • It gives alerts to state forest departments based on parameters like forest cover, forest types, climatic variables (temperature, rainfall) and recent fire incidences over the area

NDMA Guidelines

Major recommendations include:

  • Incorporate Forest Fire Prevention and Management (FFPM) in existing policy and planning documents
  • Establish National Forest fire Knowledge Network
  • Capacity building of forest officials for better use of early warning systems
  • Assess risk and prepare vulnerability and risk maps
  • Document national and international good practices and utilise them for making forest fire management more effective and practical
  • Increase community awareness

Draft National Forest Policy, 2018

  • It calls for safeguarding ecosystems from forest fires, mapping the vulnerable areas and developing and strengthening early warning systems and methods to control fire, based on remote sensing technology and community participation.

FAO Recommendations on Forest Fire Management

  • To conduct comprehensive analysis of the forest fire situation in India, including the study of number of fires and area burnt; the effects of ecological, economic and social impacts, current capacity for forest fire management at the National and States levels, including review of existing laws, regulations and policies covering forest fire management.
  • To design a training package on strategic forest fire management planning which would enable Indian foresters to prepare site specific fire plans for all the forest types in the country
  • To conduct training courses for the foresters and planners, who would then be capable of preparing strategic Forest Fire Management Plans and providing identical training to large number of field foresters throughout the country.
  • To develop minimum one model State Forest Fire Management Plan to serve as an example for subsequent State plans and National plan. Plans are to be organized into a series of program components, which can be considered for development assistance by international donors and financiers.

ISSUES AND CHALLENGES:

  1. Lack of appropriate policy: In India there are no clear guidelines for forest fire management. In November 2017, National Green Tribunal (NGT) had asked the Environment Ministry to evolve a national policy for prevention and control of forest fires. However, no progress has been made so far.
  2. Lack of funding: the allocation of funds to the states for forest fire management is largely insufficient. Further, a large amount of the money allocated under the forest management schemes are not released
  3. Early Warning: Unlike western countries, forest fire in India is largely man-made which makes it difficult to predict
  4. Lack of community participation: In most of the Indian states, community participation in forest fire management has been poor
  5. Lack of manpower: Lack of manpower hinders clearing of fire lines and also affects the patrolling of forest areas.
  6. Climate Change: The forest fire management in India do not include climate change aspects in planning, policy formulations and implementation stages

WAY FORWARD:

Policy

At the national level, a cohesive policy or action plan should be formulated to set forth the guiding principles and framework for FFPM. The policy and programmes for forest fire management should incorporate the dimension of climate change

Management

Forest fire prevention and management practices used by state forest departments also need to be strengthened

Funding and Human Resource

Greater funding for construction of watchtowers and crew stations and for frontline officers and seasonal firewatchers to spot fires is needed. Further, adequate training should be provided to field officers, seasonal firewatchers, and community volunteers involved in firefighting.

Technology

Modern firefighting techniques such as the radio-acoustic sound system for early fire detection and Doppler radar should be adopted.

Data and information

There is a need to support forest fire management through improved data and research to fill critical knowledge gaps

Awareness

Awareness generation for forest communities and visitors is important to prevent loss of life and injuries. Further, regular drills on escape methods and routes based on forest types should be conducted.

Best Practices:

1.Canadian Forest fire Danger Rating System:

  • The system collects data on fuels, weather, topography, foliar moisture content (how much moisture is in the leaves and pine needles), and type and duration of prediction.
  • The data helps managers of various fire agencies determine the areas that are most vulnerable to fires and allocate their resources accordingly. Further, the Canadian Forest Fire Behaviour Prediction (FBP) System helps managers assess how far a specific fire can spread and its severity.

2. Role of forest community: Best Practice in India:

  • Bilapaka village in Mayurbhanj District of Odhisa: The villagers have set up the Bilapaka Jangal Surakshya Parichalana Committee (BJSPC).
  • The villagers have developed an effective warning mechanism and a process to immediately stop small fire incidents

CONCLUSION: A significant amount of technical options to assist Forest Department in increasing their resilience, preparedness and response capacities against forest fire are known and available at regional, national and international levels. However, the spectrum of available options is often not known or easily accessible. To make Forest Fire Management more effective, it is of utmost significance that available options are systematically assessed, documented, shared and adapted to location specific needs in a participatory way.

STATISTICAL REPORT:

Forest Fires Report in India:

  • Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) and World Bank recently released a joint report on forest fires in India.

Highlights:

  • At least 60% of districts in India are affected by forest fires each year.
  • The top 20 districts in terms of area affected by fire from 2003 to 2016 account for 48% of the total fire-affected area and they mostly fall in Central India.
  • The 16 of the top 20 districts in terms of fire frequency are located mainly in the Northeast.
  • Here, forest fires tend to be concentrated in a smaller area that is subject to repeated burning.
  • The peak fire season is the most concentrated (shortest) in the Northeast and the Northern state of Bihar.
  • Fires in other regions, particularly districts in Central and Southern India, are more expansive.
  • Districts experiencing widespread and frequent forest fires include areas of dry and moist deciduous forest.
  • These include the borderlands of Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, and Telangana that are affected by fire on a nearly annual basis.
  • Notably, between 2006 and 2015, forest fires were detected in just under half (281 of 614) of the protected areas in India.

What are the proposed reasons?

  • In line with other parts of the world, people are the main driver of fires in India.
  • Forest fires are distributed close to people and infrastructure in India.
  • Also, India’s monsoons are largely responsible for the seasonal nature of forest fires in the country.
  • Forest fires peak during the dry months of March or April before the arrival of the monsoon.
  • The fire season mainly occurs during the four-month period between February 15 and May 15.
  • Besides, the reduced contrast in land-sea temperatures had weakened the engine that drives the monsoon.
  • But it is not yet clear how the drying of the monsoon has affected the intensity or frequency of forest fires.

Significance:

  • Forest fires contribute to global warming and hence climate change, by releasing carbon stored in trees, undergrowth and soil into the atmosphere.
  • Given this, the report gains significance with recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s special report on global warming.
  • The findings are crucial for India’s own pledge on creating additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes of Co2-equivalent by 2030.
  • In the long run, climate shifts due to anthropogenic global warming may further alter India’s forest landscape and fire regime.
  • Also, the MoEF issued national guidelines on Forest Fire Prevention and Management (FFPM) in 2000.
  • But these are no longer being implemented in true spirit.
  • The Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) has documented the shortage of dedicated funding for FFPM at the central and state levels.
  • The recent report is thus expected to be a key input in issuing a national policy on FFPM.