Policy Engagements and Blogs

Is Conservation Impossible? The Case of Coastal Regulation in India

Kanchi Kohli

August 6, 2019

NEW BOOK CHAPTER BY MANJU MENON AND KANCHI KOHLI
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE

Manju Menon, Senior Fellow and Kanchi Kohli, Senior Researcher have authored a chapter ‘Is Conservation Impossible? The Case of Coastal Regulation in India’ in the book, ‘Nature Conservation in the New Economy: People, Wildlife and the Law in India’ edited by Ghazala Shahabuddin and K Sivaramakrishnan. Read below an abstract of the chapter:

India’s coastline that is spread over thirteen states and Union Territories (UTs) is a space that epitomises policy contradictions. It is to be managed both as a region of immense biodiversity importance as well as zone for high economic investments through industrial and infrastructure projects. This ‘balance of priorities’ is to be arrived at by special regulatory bodies called the Coastal Zone Management Authorities(CZMAs) set up at the central and state government levels.

This paper critically analyses the effectiveness of the Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) notification, 2011 to achieve these priorities through the functioning of CZMAs. The paper illustrates the challenges of regulating high impact development projects in ecologically important coastal zones through two cases, a proposed port in Uttara Kannada, Karnataka and the Adani Port and SEZ in Kutch, Gujarat.The paper concludes that while the CZMAs have granted regulatory approvals to such projects, the management and conservation functions of the law have remained stuck in bureaucratic hurdles.

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