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Unscientific cutting of Himalayan soil causing disasters: Former GSI official

The former additional director general of GSI Tribhuwan Singh Pangti, who was associated with the now-demolished Rishiganga hydroelectric project for initial two years as a geologist, said the hydroelectric companies working in the Himalayas have no knowledge of land formation of the region due to which all projects are causing natural disasters.

Reported by: PTI Pithoragarh Updated on: February 16, 2021 15:37 IST
Uttarakhand, uttarakhand disaster, chamoli floods, uttarakhand glacier burst reason, himalayan soil
Image Source : PTI

BRO personnel carry out rescue and restoration work at Raini village, a week after the glacier burst at Joshimath which triggered a massive flash flood, in Chamoli district of Uttarakhand.

Unscientific cutting of Himalayan soil by infrastructure projects is disrupting the fragile ecology of the region and causing disasters, warned a former official of the Geological Survey of India on Tuesday. The former additional director general of GSI Tribhuwan Singh Pangti, who was associated with the now-demolished Rishiganga hydroelectric project for initial two years as a geologist, said the hydroelectric companies working in the Himalayas have no knowledge of land formation of the region due to which all projects are causing natural disasters.

"Separating layers of Himalayan soil with big machines without knowing fully about its characteristics is doing grievous harm to the region," he said.

"If these companies want to work in the Himalayan region they need to acquire knowledge of geological susceptibility, geohazards, and glaciological studies from some known Himalayan experts before initiating any hydroelectric project in the region," Pangti told PTI.

The state government needs to form a high-powered committee of experts to advise on matters of all infrastructure projects in the Himalayan region, he said.

"If such an expert committee is not formed, projects being installed in the fragile Himalayan region are bound to invite natural calamities in the future which may even be bigger than the recent flash flood in Rishiganga," Pangti said. 

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