💥UPSC 2026, 2027 UAP Mentorship September Batch

Wildlife Conservation Efforts

The making of an ecological disaster in the Nicobar

Introduction

The Great Nicobar Island Project, with an estimated expenditure of ₹72,000 crore, has sparked unprecedented controversy. Instead of strengthening India’s ecological security and inclusive growth, the project threatens to uproot indigenous communities such as the Nicobarese and the Shompen, destroy one of the world’s richest biodiversity hotspots, and expose the island to severe natural disaster risks. By bypassing constitutional bodies, statutory protections, and scientific warnings, the project raises fundamental questions about governance, justice, and sustainability in India’s developmental trajectory.

Uprooting Tribal Communities

  1. Nicobarese displacement: The project site overlaps with ancestral villages of the Nicobarese, already displaced once by the 2004 tsunami. Their hope of return will now be permanently extinguished.
  2. Shompen threat: The Shompen, classified as a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG), face cultural and ecological extinction as their reserve land is denotified and forests destroyed.
  3. Violation of tribal safeguards: Article 338A mandates consultation with the National Commission for Scheduled Tribes, which was bypassed. The Tribal Council’s objections were ignored after being “rushed” into signing a no-objection letter, later revoked.

Mockery of Legal and Regulatory Safeguards

  1. Social Impact Assessment failure: The 2013 Act on Land Acquisition and Rehabilitation excluded Nicobarese and Shompen from consideration, denying them stakeholder status.
  2. Forest Rights Act ignored: The Shompen’s authority to regulate and protect forests was bypassed.
  3. Constitutional neglect: Bodies like NCST and local tribal councils were side-lined, undermining democratic accountability.

The Farce of Compensatory Afforestation

  1. Massive tree felling: The Ministry projects 8.5 lakh trees may be cut, but independent estimates put the figure between 32–58 lakh.
  2. Afforestation mismatch: Compensatory afforestation is planned in Haryana, thousands of kilometres away, with a completely different ecology.
  3. Mining contradiction: A quarter of this afforestation land has been auctioned for mining, nullifying the mitigation strategy.
  4. CRZ violation: Port site falls under CRZ 1A, which prohibits construction due to turtle nesting sites and coral reefs.

Ecological and Wildlife Concerns

  1. Nicobar long-tailed macaque: Primatologists’ warnings on its survival risks were ignored.
  2. Sea turtle nesting mis-assessed: Surveys were conducted off-season, compromising accuracy.
  3. Dugong impact underestimated: Drone-based surveys only covered shallow waters.
  4. Biased assessments: Reports were allegedly conducted under duress, undermining credibility.

A Disaster-Prone Location

  1. Tsunami precedent: In 2004, the island subsided by 15 feet.
  2. Seismic zone risk: A 6.2 magnitude earthquake in July 2025 reinforced its vulnerability.
  3. Jeopardising investment: Infrastructure and lives face catastrophic risk from earthquakes and tsunamis.

Conclusion

The Great Nicobar Project symbolizes an ecological and humanitarian misadventure where short-term ambitions eclipse constitutional morality, environmental prudence, and tribal justice. The survival of the Nicobarese and Shompen, along with an irreplaceable ecosystem, hangs in the balance. True development must integrate ecological sustainability and social justice rather than sacrifice them at the altar of misplaced mega-infrastructure.

Value Addition

Way Forward

  • Inclusive Development with Tribal Consent
    • Ensure free, prior, and informed consent of Nicobarese and Shompen communities in line with the Niyamgiri judgment (2013).
    • Empower tribal councils in decision-making as mandated by the Forest Rights Act (2006).
  • Strengthening Legal and Institutional Safeguards
    • Consult the National Commission for Scheduled Tribes (NCST) and respect constitutional provisions under Article 338A.
    • Strengthen Social Impact Assessments with participation of affected communities.
  • Rethinking Compensatory Afforestation
    • Undertake afforestation within island ecosystems, not in distant states like Haryana.
    • Promote ecosystem restoration rather than mere plantation drives.
  • Ecologically Sensitive Area Protection
    • Enforce CRZ 1A norms protecting turtle nesting sites, coral reefs, and coastal biodiversity.
    • Recognise Great Nicobar as an Ecologically Sensitive Zone (ESZ) under Environment Protection Act.
  • Disaster-Resilient Planning
    • Recognise that Great Nicobar lies in Seismic Zone V and redesign infrastructure accordingly.
    • Adopt a low-impact development model suited for fragile ecosystems (eco-tourism, research hubs, small-scale renewable energy).
  • Alternative Growth Models
    • Focus on sustainable livelihoods for locals (fisheries, forest produce, heritage tourism).
    • Leverage the island’s location for strategic security through minimal-impact naval installations, avoiding large-scale civilian displacement.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2017] ‘Climate Change’ is a global problem. How India will be affected by climate change? How Himalayan and coastal states of India will be affected by climate change?

Linkage: The Great Nicobar Project directly links to this PYQ as it illustrates how climate change impacts combine with ill-planned development to heighten risks. Rising sea levels and intensifying cyclones threaten India’s coastal states, while Great Nicobar, lying in a seismically active and tsunami-prone zone, showcases the compounded vulnerability of fragile ecosystems and communities. Thus, it exemplifies how coastal regions face existential risks when climate change interacts with unsustainable projects.

Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

Attend Now

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

JOIN THE COMMUNITY

Join us across Social Media platforms.