Green Belt Norms Relaxation in India: A Step Back for Environment?

Syllabus: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment.

 

Context

  • Governments are reducing mandatory green-cover requirements inside industrial estates to promote “ease of doing business.”
  • Such relaxations ignore the ecological role of green belts and the limits of their compensatory value.

Why Green Belts Matter?

  • Industrial development clears natural vegetation, causing habitat loss and ecological alteration.
  • On-site green belts offer local benefits such as dust reduction, microclimate regulation, and noise suppression.
  • Evidence shows well-designed green belts reduce TSP by up to 65% and noise by 10–17 decibels.
  • However, these benefits remain localised and cannot replace natural ecosystems that offer carbon sequestration, hydrological balance, or biodiversity support.
    • Limits of Industrial Green Belts
  • Industrial plantations are often narrow, mono-specific and degrade over time.
  • They do not restore ecological connectivity or resilience.
  • They remain mitigative, not restorative, tools.

Why Global Comparisons Are Misleading?

  • Green-cover norms abroad reflect different population densities, ecological capacities, and land availability.
  • Countries with vast open landscapes can afford lower on-site green ratios.
  • Adopting such norms in densely populated, industrially stressed regions like India is ecologically unsound.

Need for a Landscape-Level Approach

  • Instead of reducing plot-level green cover, policymakers should balance internal flexibility with external obligations.
  • Mandatory off-site greening can include:
    • Developing regional green reserves around industrial clusters.
      Restoring degraded lands, river basins, and buffers near protected areas.
      Integrating industries into green credit or carbon-offset programmes.

Way Forward

  • Combine on-site belts (local healing) with landscape-scale restoration (systemic resilience).
  • Industries must become ecological stewards, not mere compliance actors.
  • A Nature-Based Solution (NbS) framework ensures that industrial growth and ecosystem regeneration progress together.

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