Great Nicobar Project: NGT upholds clearance amidst environmental concerns
The National Green Tribunal has approved the Great Nicobar project. This decision faces criticism for relying on studies from government bodies that granted clearance. Vague conditions for environmental protection were accepted. The tribunal also ...

National Green Tribunal (NGT) was created to provide that vigilance. But in upholding clearance for the Great Nicobar project earlier this month, it has fallen short. It relied on studies by Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) and National Centre for Sustainable Coastal Management (NCSCM) - both under environment ministry that granted the clearance. It accepted conditions such as staggered tree-felling or protecting nesting trees 'as far as possible' - phrases elastic enough to mean everything and nothing.
NGT also okayed NCSCM's finding that no part of the project lies within Coastal Regulation Zone Category IA - the most stringently protected coastal classification - despite the site including Galathea Bay, a critical habitat for leatherback turtles, corals, mangroves and Nicobar megapodes. It further declined to place in the public domain the findings of High-Powered Committee constituted in 2023, whose report was submitted in 2025, instead accepting a plea of strategic confidentiality without fuller explanation.
Strategic development cannot be ignored, but urgency does not override environmental law. Institutions matter most when the stakes are highest. If morning shows the day, the safeguards NGT has sought may well be diluted at the first opportunity, as seen repeatedly across India. What truly matters is enforcement, not mere endorsement.
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