‘Will Cut Only 10,582 Mangroves For Pipeline,’ BPCL Informs Bombay High Court |
INDIA – The Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited (BPCL) has informed the Bombay high court on Thursday that it will cut only 10,582 mangrove trees and no other terrestrial trees while laying pipelines from its refinery in Mahul, Chembur to Rasayani in Raigad district. BPCL has undertaken a project to lay underground 43km-long pipelines for transporting petroleum products that will pass through its refinery, Mumbai Port Trust Authority, CIDCO and private lands. It filed an affidavit before the HC which is hearing an application filed by activist Zoru Bathena urging the court to recall its January 23 order allowing BPCL to cut 11,677 trees, including mangrove trees, for laying of the pipelines. “It is true that 10,582 mangrove trees and 1,095 terrestrial trees have been identified for cutting. However, there will be cutting of only mangrove trees and no terrestrial trees will be cut,” BPCL’s reply read. In view of September 2017 order of the high court which mandated its permission for felling of trees, BPCL had approached the high court. BPCL had contended that the pipeline was crucial for transportation of petroleum products due to non-availability of the railways which would reduce road traffic. Also, it would reduce losses on accounts of loading and unloading operations. |
| Why the next two years will make or break battle to rescue tropical forests |
BRAZIL – To see how escalating deforestation and rising temperatures are already having profound impacts, look no further than the Amazon rainforest, where water levels last year reached their lowest since measurement began, threatening both humans and animals, and the integrity of the world’s biggest tropical forest. In the lead up to COP28, the annual Forest Declaration Assessment report , opens new tabfound that despite more than 140 countries pledging at COP26 to end deforestation by 2030, tree loss increased by 4% in 2022 compared with 2021. The amount would have been higher had not Brazil, under its new president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and two other important rainforest countries, Indonesia and Malaysia, achieved drastic reductions.So, while activists such as Global Canopy celebrated the fact that the promise to halt and reverse deforestation by 2030 made it into the final text at COP28 for the first time, they also called attention to the fact that global pledges to end deforestation, stretching back to the 2014 New York Declaration (when the deadline was 2020), have rung hollow. Last month, there was a grim reminder of how easily progress can be reversed, when official data from Brazil showed that deforestation in the Cerrado biome, Brazil’s agricultural heartland, increased by 43% on the previous year, even as deforestation in the Amazon fell 50%. |
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