Announcements
UPSC Foundation 2026 Prime Batch - Admissions Open JPSC 14th CCE Complete Course 2025 - Enroll Now Mains Answer Writing Programme - Limited Seats Daily Current Affairs - Free Access UPSC Prelims Test Series 2026 - 5000+ MCQs
+91 91025 57680
learnpro Civil Services
LearnPro Menu
Home Current Affairs All Articles
UPSC
UPSC NOTES
STATE PSC
OPTIONAL SUBJECTS
CURRENT AFFAIRS
DAILY EDITORIAL
COURSES
DOWNLOAD NOTES
PYQ Papers Mains Answer Writing WhatsApp Counselling Call +91 91025 57680 Online Courses

Editorial Topic

Rampant Development, Not Climate, Pushing Himalayas to the Edge

Brief Context

Recent disasters across Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and Jammu Kashmir suggest that the real accelerant is man-made disruption, while global warming certainly exacerbates environmental stress.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS3/Environment; Sustainable Development

Context

  • Recent disasters across Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and Jammu & Kashmir suggest that the real accelerant is man-made disruption, while global warming certainly exacerbates environmental stress.

Fragility of the Himalayan Ecosystem

  • The Himalayan ecosystem is inherently fragile due to its young geological age, steep slopes, and dynamic weather systems. It features:
    • High seismic activity due to tectonic movements;
    • Rapid erosion and landslides triggered by deforestation and slope destabilization;
    • ISRO reports that glacial lakes in the Himalayas have expanded significantly over the past three decades, with some growing by over 170%—a direct consequence of warming and land-use changes, increasing the risk of glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs);
  • The IPCC reports confirm that the Himalayas are among the most climate-sensitive regions.
  • According to the State of Environment Report by MoEFCC (2021), over 30% of Himalayan glaciers have retreated in the last five decades.
  • The National Disaster Management Authority’s SACHET Portal highlights the increasing frequency of landslides, flash floods, and avalanches in Himalayan states.
    • These disasters are often worsened by poor planning and lack of early warning systems.

Recent Devastation

  • In August, Punjab faced its worst floods since 1988 as the Sutlej, Beas, and Ravi rivers overflowed, submerging villages.
    • Several people died across Himalayan states due to torrential rains, while Dharali village in Uttarkashi, Uttarakhand, was wiped out by a landslide-triggered deluge.
    • These disasters echo past Himalayan tragedies — the Kedarnath floods (2013) and the Chamoli disaster (2021) — each treated as an ‘unprecedented act of nature’.
  • Between 2017 and 2022, over 1,550 lives were lost and more than 12,000 homes damaged in Himachal Pradesh alone due to floods and landslides.

Man-Made Disruptions: Development vs. Ecology

  • Unplanned Development: Widespread infrastructure projects, especially hydropower plants, highways, and tunnels, are being built without adequate environmental or disaster impact assessments.
  • Deforestation and Land Use Change: Expanding agriculture, urbanization, and hydropower projects cause large-scale deforestation.
    • Forest Survey of India reports highlight that forest cover in some Himalayan states is shrinking due to unregulated construction.
  • Hydropower & Infrastructure Development: The push for dams, tunnels, and highways has destabilized slopes.
    • Himachal Pradesh currently has 180 operational hydropower plants, with hundreds more in the pipeline. Uttarakhand has 40 plants running and 87 under planning.
    • These projects, combined with road-widening and tunnel construction, use heavy machinery that destabilizes slopes and amplifies disaster risks.
    • Projects under the Char Dham Pariyojana and rampant tunneling in Uttarakhand increase landslide risks.
  • Tourism Pressure: Mass tourism in fragile alpine regions, especially around Himachal, Sikkim, and Uttarakhand, strains local ecosystems.
    • Solid waste, road expansion, and unregulated resorts accelerate degradation.
  • Sand Mining & Riverbed Exploitation: Excessive mining of Himalayan rivers reduces water flow, increases flood risk, and disrupts aquatic biodiversity.

Strengthening the Himalayan Ecosystem

  • National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem (NMSHE): A key mission under the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC), it promotes research, policy formulation, and capacity building to sustain ecological resilience.
  • National Mission on Himalayan Studies (NMHS): It supports research and pilot projects across themes like water resource management, biodiversity conservation, climate-resilient infrastructure, and waste handling.
    • It aligns with national priorities like ‘Lifestyle for Environment (LiFE)’ and global goals such as the SDGs.

Judicial Intervention & Observation

  • Recently, the Supreme Court of India warned that Himachal Pradesh risked disappearing ‘from the map of India’ if reckless development continued.
    • It said that the tunnels along the Chandigarh–Manali highway became ‘death traps’ during rains.
  • In September, visuals of tree logs floating in floods prompted Justice B.R. Gavai to warn against sacrificing forests and lives for unchecked development.

Pathways for Sustainable Development

  • Development With Context: Developmental projects need to undergo lifecycle, disaster, and social impact assessments before approval, alongside genuine public consultations.
  • Eco-sensitive Zoning: Limiting construction on fragile slopes.
  • Community-based Tourism Models with waste management systems.
  • Hydropower Alternatives: Prioritize micro-hydel projects over mega dams.
  • Climate-resilient Infrastructure: Incorporate seismic safety and green design.
  • Strengthened Early Warning Systems for landslides, GLOFs, and flash floods.
  • Strict land-use planning to prevent unsafe construction.
Daily Mains Practice Question
[Q] Critically examine how rapid development is contributing to the ecological degradation and increased disaster vulnerability of the Himalayan region.

Source: TH

Call WhatsApp Join Batch Download Syllabus