A dangerous march towards a Himalayan ecocide


A Dangerous March Towards a Himalayan Ecocide

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Project Name Char Dham Mahamarg Vikas Pariyojana / Char Dham All-Weather Road Project
Launch Year 2016–17
Nodal Ministry Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH)
Executing Agency Border Roads Organisation (BRO) + NHAI
Total Length ~900 km of national highways
Initial Approved Cost ₹12,000 crore (Cabinet, 2016)
States Covered Uttarakhand
Key Shrines Yamunotri, Gangotri, Kedarnath, Badrinath
SC Committee High Power Committee (HPC), former Justice A.K. Sikri
Road Width Contested DL-PS (Double Lane Paved Shoulder ~10m) vs. Intermediate Lane (~5.5m)
Forest Diverted (Nov 2025) 43 hectares (Dharali–Harsil corridor); 10 ha for muck dumping
Trees to be Felled ~7,000 Deodar (Devdar/Cedrus deodara) + native species
Highway Affected National Highway 34 (Gangotri Highway)
Eco-Sensitive Zone Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone (notified under EP Act 1986)
Key Enabling Law Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980; Environment Protection Act, 1986
Monitoring Committee Bhagirathi ESZ Monitoring Committee (author Mallika Bhanot is a member)
Key Species Cedrus deodara (State tree of Himachal Pradesh; sacred, keystone species)
2025 Disaster Toll >4,000 deaths (climate-induced, Himalayas); 506 in Western Himalayas (Jun–Aug) [S1][S4]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Economic

Social


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Char Dham All-Weather Road Project was launched in 2016–17 under MoRTH at an initial cost of ₹12,000 crore, covering approximately 900 km in Uttarakhand. [S3][S5]
  2. The Supreme Court constituted a High Power Committee (HPC) under former Justice A.K. Sikri to review the Char Dham project's environmental impact. [S2]
  3. HPC recommended limiting road width to 5.5 metres (intermediate lane) in ecologically sensitive stretches—overridden by MoRTH's preference for DL-PS (Double Lane Paved Shoulder). [S1][S2]
  4. On November 12, 2025, Uttarakhand Forest Department approved diversion of 43 hectares of forest land for Char Dham road-widening; 10 hectares earmarked for muck dumping. [S1]
  5. Approximately 7,000 Deodar trees (Cedrus deodara) approved for felling in the Dharali-Harsil corridor, which lies within the Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone. [S1][S2]
  6. Deodar (Cedrus deodara) is the State tree of Himachal Pradesh and a keystone species binding Himalayan slopes. [S2]
  7. The Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone is notified under the Environment Protection Act, 1986. [S1]
  8. In 2025, the Western Himalayas recorded extreme weather on 88 out of 92 monsoon days (June–August), resulting in 506 deaths across Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, J&K, and Ladakh. [S4]
  9. Executing agencies for the Char Dham project include the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) and NHAI, under MoRTH. [S3][S5]
  10. Towns devastated by 2025 Himalayan disasters include Dharali, Harsil, Uttarkashi, Chamoli, Kullu, Mandi, and Kishtwar. [S1]
  11. The Chamoli disaster (February 7, 2021)—a glacier burst on the Rishiganga river—killed over 200 people and was an early warning of Himalayan instability. [S6]
  12. National Highway 34 (Gangotri Highway) is the specific stretch where the Hina–Tekhla forest diversion (8.07 km) was approved in July 2025. [S2]
  13. Mallika Bhanot is a member of Ganga Ahvaan (citizen conservation forum) and the Bhagirathi ESZ Monitoring Committee. [S1]
  14. The Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980 governs diversion of forest land for non-forest purposes; any diversion requires Central Government approval. [S2]
  15. The article warns that muck dumping in forest areas chokes river drainage channels, exacerbating downstream flooding. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

GS Paper Specific Syllabus Heading
GS-I Geophysical phenomena — earthquakes, landslides; Distribution of key natural resources; Changes in critical geographical features
GS-II Statutory/regulatory bodies; Supreme Court directives; Centre–State relations (forest clearances); Governance and accountability
GS-III Conservation and environmental impact assessment; Disaster management; Infrastructure and its ecological trade-offs; Biodiversity
GS-IV Ethics in governance; Intergenerational equity; Whistleblowing / Civil society role

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Char Dham All-Weather Road Project exemplifies the tension between strategic imperatives and ecological sustainability in the Himalayas. Critically examine the governance failures that have led to the continued undermining of Supreme Court directives and expert committee recommendations."
  2. "The Himalayan region is witnessing a vicious cycle where infrastructure development exacerbates disaster vulnerability, which in turn demands more infrastructure. Analyse this paradox with reference to the 2025 disaster season and suggest a framework for disaster-resilient development."
  3. "'Ecocide' as a concept challenges the conventional development-versus-environment binary. With reference to the Himalayan ecosystem, discuss whether India needs a legal framework criminalising large-scale ecological destruction."

9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. Char Dham All-Weather Road Project — the central infrastructure scheme whose approval mechanisms are under scrutiny; study SC orders, HPC findings, BRO exemptions.
  2. Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone — statutory instrument under EP Act 1986; understand ESZ notification process, buffer zones, and permitted activities.
  3. Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980 & Amendment 2023 — governs forest diversion; 2023 amendment significantly changed the scope and has been controversial in ecologically sensitive areas.
  4. Chamoli / Kedarnath Disasters — study NDMA's post-disaster reports to understand how infrastructure contributed to disaster amplification.
  5. National Landslide Risk Mitigation Programme (NDMA) — India's policy framework for landslide hazard; NDMA document directly relevant. [S6]
  6. Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030) — international DRR framework India is signatory to; provides the normative backdrop for "disaster resilience first" arguments.
  7. Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification, 2006 & Draft 2020 — procedural law for project clearances; understanding exemptions and dilutions is key.
  8. India's Third National Communication to UNFCCC — India's official climate vulnerability data for the Himalayas.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry for Char Dham: Aspirants often attribute it to the Ministry of Tourism — it is under MoRTH (Ministry of Road Transport and Highways). Tourism Ministry handles Char Dham Yatra facilitation, not road construction.
  2. BRO vs. NHAI confusion: Both agencies execute Char Dham stretches, but BRO handles strategically sensitive / border-area stretches—this distinction matters for questions on defence infrastructure.
  3. Deodar as State tree: Cedrus deodara is the State tree of Himachal Pradesh, not Uttarakhand. Uttarakhand's State tree is Buransh (Rhododendron arboreum)—a classic trap.
  4. ESZ under EP Act, not Forest Act: Eco-Sensitive Zones are notified under the Environment Protection Act, 1986, NOT the Forest Conservation Act, 1980—two entirely different statutes with different triggers.
  5. Confusing HPC (High Power Committee) with HLEC or NTCA panels: The SC constituted the Char Dham-specific HPC under Justice A.K. Sikri—do not conflate with standing bodies like NTCA (tigers) or HLEC (elephant corridors).
  6. "4,000 deaths" vs. "506 deaths": The article cites >4,000 deaths for all of 2025 across Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand combined; search data shows 506 deaths specifically in the Western Himalayas during June–August 2025—these are not contradictory but measure different time windows and geographies.

11. Sources


Note compiled for UPSC 2026–27 cycle. All facts cross-checked against Tier 1 (PIB/NDMA), Tier 2, and Tier 4 (DTE/The Hindu) sources. Verify exact death toll figures against official NDMA/state government releases as data may be revised.