- Forestry in India
Forestry is a major government enterprise inIndia which faces the challenges of dwindling forest cover area due tooverpopulation ,farming and environmental factors.History
Some 500,000 square kilometres, about 17 percent of
India 's land area, were regarded asForest Area in the early 1990s. In FY 1987, however, actual forest cover was 640,000 square kilometres. However, because more than 50 percent of this land wasbarren or bushland, the area under productive forest was actually less than 350,000 square kilometres, or approximately 10 percent of the country's land area. The growing population's high demand for forest resources continued the destruction and degradation of forests through the 1980s, taking a heavy toll on the soil. An estimated 6 billion tons oftopsoil were lost annually. However, India's 0.6 percent average annual rate ofdeforestation for agricultural and non-lumbering land uses in the decade beginning in 1981 was one of the lowest in the world and on a par withBrazil . SirDietrich Brandis was a German forester who worked in India. He is considered the "Father of tropical forestry".Distribution
Many forests in the mid-1990s are found in high-rainfall, high-altitude regions, areas to which access is difficult. About 20 percent of total forestland is in
Madhya Pradesh ; other states with significant forests areOrissa ,Maharashtra , andAndhra Pradesh (each with about 9 percent of the national total);Arunachal Pradesh (7 percent); andUttar Pradesh (6 percent). The variety of forest vegetation is large: there are 600 species ofhardwoods ,sal ("Shorea robusta") and teak being the principal economic species.trategy to increase cover
India's long-term strategy for forestry development reflects three major objectives: to reduce
soil erosion andflooding ; to supply the growing needs of the domestic wood products industries; and to supply the needs of the rural population forfuelwood ,fodder , small timber, and miscellaneousforest produce . To achieve these objectives, theNational Commission on Agriculture in 1976 recommended the reorganization of state forestry departments and advocated the concept of social forestry. The commission itself worked on the first two objectives, emphasizing traditional forestry and wildlife activities; in pursuit of the third objective, the commission recommended the establishment of a new kind of unit to develop community forests. Following the leads of Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh, a number of other states also established community-based forestry agencies that emphasized programs on farm forestry, timber management, extension forestry,reforestation of degraded forests, and use of forests for recreational purposes.Such socially responsible forestry was encouraged by state community forestry agencies. They emphasized such projects as planting wood lots on denuded communal cattle-grazing grounds to make villages self-sufficient in fuelwood, to supply timber needed for the construction of village houses, and to provide the wood needed for the repair of farm implements. Both individual farmers and tribal communities were also encouraged to grow trees for profit. For example, in Gujarat, one of the more aggressive states in developing programs of socioeconomic importance, the forestry department distributed 200 million tree seedlings in 1983. The fast-growing
eucalyptus is the main species being planted nationwide, followed bypine andpoplar .Conservation
The role of forests in the national economy and in ecology was further emphasized in the 1988 National Forest Policy, which focused on ensuring environmental stability, restoring the ecological balance, and preserving the remaining forests. Other objectives of the policy were meeting the need for fuelwood, fodder, and small timber for rural and tribal people while recognizing the need to actively involve local people in the management of forest resources. Also in 1988, the Forest Conservation Act of 1980 was amended to facilitate stricter conservation measures. A new target was to increase the forest cover to 33 percent of India's land area from the then-official estimate of 23 percent. In June 1990, the central government adopted resolutions that combined forest science with social forestry, that is, taking the sociocultural traditions of the local people into consideration.
Conservation has been an avowed goal of government policy since independence. Afforestation increased from a negligible amount in the first plan to nearly 89,000 square kilometres in the seventh plan. The cumulative area afforested during the 1951-91 period was nearly 179,000 square kilometres. However, despite large-scale tree planting programs, forestry is one arena in which India has actually regressed since independence. Annual fellings at about four times the growth rate are a major cause. Widespread pilfering by villagers for firewood and fodder also represents a major decrement. In addition, the forested area has been shrinking as a result of land cleared for farming, inundations for irrigation and hydroelectric power projects, and construction of new urban areas, industrial plants, roads, power lines, and schools.
Chipko Movement
Since the early 1970s, as they realized that deforestation threatened not only the ecology but their livelihood in a variety of ways, people have become more interested and involved in conservation. The best known popular activist movement is the
Chipko Movement , in which local women decided to fight the government and the vested interests to save trees. The women ofChamoli District ,Uttar Pradesh , declared that they would embrace--literally "to stick to" (chipkna inHindi )--trees if a sporting goods manufacturer attempted to cut down ash trees in their district. Since initial activism in 1973, the movement has spread and become an ecological movement leading to similar actions in other forest areas. The movement has slowed down the process of deforestation, exposed vested interests, increased ecological awareness, and demonstrated the viability of people power.ee also
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Social forestry in India References
*cite web|url=http://countrystudies.us/india/106.htm|work=U.S. Library of Congress (released in
public domain )|title=Library of Congress Country Studies|accessdate=2007-10-06
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