Published on: January 26, 2026

HIMALAYAN ECOCIDE

HIMALAYAN ECOCIDE

NEWS: Reckless infrastructure development in the fragile Himalayas, especially the Char Dham road project, is accelerating ecological collapse and disasters, and must be replaced by disaster-resilient, science-based development

Himalayas are at risk

  • In 2025, climate disasters occurred almost all year (~331 days).
  • Over 4,000 deaths due to climate induced disasters, mainly in Himachal Pradesh & Uttarakhand.
  • Towns like Dharali, Harsil, Chamoli, Uttarkashi, Kullu suffered from cloudbursts

Char Dham Road Project

Involved:

  • Felling of ~7,000 Deodar (Devdar) trees
  • Diversion of 43 hectares of forest land
  • Use of DL-PS standard (12- metre wide road)

Deodar (Devdar) forests are irreplaceable

  • Slope stabilisation: Deep roots bind soil → prevent landslides
  • Avalanche & debris control: Act as natural barriers
  • Keep air & water temperatures low

Hence, Supreme Court discouraged their felling.

Policy contradiction by the government

The project contradicts National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem, which aims to:

  • Protect Himalayan ecology
  • Monitor glaciers & biodiversity
  • Reduce disaster risk
  • Promote sustainable livelihoods

Philosophical & civilisational argument

  • “Without the Himalayas, there is no India”
  • Himalayas: Control monsoon, feed rivers, sustain agriculture, shape Indian culture & spirituality
  • Destroying them is not development, but selfsabotage.