Issues and Analysis on IFA amendment Act is a new lease of life for UPSC Civil Services Examination (General Studies) Preparation

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    IFA amendment Act is a new lease of life

    The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) has finalized the first draft of the process of “comprehensively amending” the backbone of forest governance in India—the Indian Forest Act, 1927 (IFA). The Indian Forest Act was enacted in 1927 to ‘consolidate the law related to forest, the transit of forest produce, and the duty liable on timber and other forest produce’.

    Body:

    There has been a severe decline in the forest cover of the country mainly because of large-scale diversion of forest lands for agriculture, diversion for “development” projects and regularisation of encroachments by state governments. Many reports like the MB Shah report of 2010 and the TSR Subramanian report of 2015, have talked about amending the IFA. Thus, the IFA amendment Act is a new lease of life with the following new provisions:

    • New definitions of Forest and Community in line with changing environmental, socio-economic and political scenario.
    • The amendment has increased the focus to conservation, enrichment and sustainable management of forest resources and matters connected therewith to safeguard ecological stability.
    • It addresses the concerns related to climate change and international commitments.
    • More Power to forest officers under Section 66(2) of the Indian Forest (Amendment) Act forest-officer, may if necessary, use firearms for securing of the forest-produce.
    • The Union government has proposed that the Centre will be able to intervene in the states on matters of management of forestlands, overruling the states on several counts when it deems fit.
    • The amendment introduces a new category of forests — production forest. These will be forests with specific objectives for production of timber, pulp, pulpwood, firewood, non-timber forest produce, medicinal plants or any forest species to increase production in the country for a specified period.
    • It provides for empowering the state governments to levy cess upto 10% of value assessed of mining products removed from the forests and water used for irrigation or on industries. The cess shall be used exclusively for reforestation, forest protection and other purposes connected with the tree planting, forest development and conservation.
    • The proposed amendments also stated that the state government “may recognise and notify private forest at the request of the owner” if the forest is used primarily for environmental conservation and preservation including, protecting water catchments
    • It also defines the procedure to be followed for declaring an area to be a Reserved Forest, a Protected Forest or a Village Forest.
    • It defines what a forest offence is, what are the acts prohibited inside a Reserved Forest, and penalties leviable on violation of the provisions of the Act.

    However, there are a few concerns with the Draft IFA:

    • Clash with Forest Rights Act: The exclusion of ‘village forestry’ from the preview of Forest Right Act (forest official supersedes gram sabha) is legally contradictory and would add confusion on the ground
    • Give more power to forest officials: The draft Bill reinforces the idea of bureaucratic control of forests, providing immunity for actions such as use of firearms by personnel to prevent an offence. Critics argue that this would turn quarter of India’s land into police state.
    • Definition of forest: Various national and international agencies such as FAO, CBD, UNFCCC and FSI have adopted the definition of forest that account density and area under tree as the basis of definition. While proposed amendment consider only administrative needs and ignores ecological parameters while defining forest.
    • Forced relocation of forest dwellers: The draft mentions that the state governments could take away the rights of the forest dwellers if the government feels it is not in line with “conservation of the proposed reserved forest” by payment to the people impacted or by the grant of land

    Conclusion:

    India’s forests play a key role in moderating the lives of not just the adivasis and other traditional dwellers, but everyone in the subcontinent, through their impact on the climate and monsoons.


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