Assam proposes elevated roads to reduce accidents of animals on National Highway 37
The wildlife department has identified eight crossing points to build flyoversTHE
government of Assam recently proposed building elevated roads with
viaducts and flyovers on stretches of National Highway 37 (NH37). The
highway acts as a boundary to the Kaziranga Tiger Reserve, also home to
the world-famous One-Horned Indian Rhino. It has been claimed that the
proposed move would provide easy passage to animals moving between
Kaziranga and the adjacent Karbi Anglong Elephant Reserve, which lies
to the south of the tiger reserve. During floods, when Kaziranga gets
submerged under water, animals cross over to Karbi Anglong, which is at
a higher elevation. The state’s wildlife department has identified
eight animal crossing points, including one for Hollock Gibbons (see
‘Proposed corridors’).
Source: Committee report submitted by the Government of Assam to the Union Ministry of Environment and ForestsThe
proposal has been made in response to an order issued by the National
Green Tribunal (NGT) in November 2013. A case filed by Right to
Information (RTI) activist Rohit Choudhury in NGT in August 2013 pointed
out that NH37 had become a dangerous passage for animals crossing over
from one reserve to the other. Choudhury, who used RTI to obtain data
from the government, concluded that vehicular accidents on the highway
caused more than 250 animal deaths between 2003 and 2013. This includes
two tiger deaths in 2005 and six leopard deaths in about a decade. Hog
deer have seen the maximum casualties at 132 during the same period (see
‘Animal deaths on NH37 from 2003 to 2013’).
Source: Government of AssamThe
state government’s proposal also recommends effective traffic
management on NH37, especially during monsoons, to safeguard the
movement of animals till the flyovers are constructed. Government data
shows that more than 6,000 vehicles pass through NH37 every day. The
state government had promised in 1991 to decongest the stretch, but did
not keep its word.
In the same year, the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests gave
clearance to a refinery in Numaligarh in Golaghat district of Assam.
The refinery is located less than 20 km from Kaziranga. One of the
preconditions for setting up the refinery was to denotify a stretch of
about 66 km of the road that runs close to the reserve and create an
alternative route for the passage of animals. Although the refinery was
completed in 2000, the alternative route was not created, Choudhury
says.