Environmental Impact Assessment
Dr. Aneesh Mathew
Assistant Professor
Department of Civil Engineering
NIT Tiruchirappalli
Post Audit activities
EIA - series of steps, leading from screening
through scoping and EIS preparation, to
consultation and decision making.
Much focus has been given on pre-decision
stages of EIA, and the neglect of post-decision
monitoring and post-auditing stages, has
severely constrained the maturation of EIA
systems world-wide.
Post-Audit Activities
Objectives
To produce an audit report with audit findings
To contribute towards formulation of an Action
Plan for continual performance improvement
Actions
1. Collate Information and Follow Up
Outstanding Issues
Information to be organised should include:
Completed pre-audit questionnaire, operational document
checklists
Completed on-site survey questionnaires, on-site audit
protocols
All relevant correspondence, memoranda, reports, diagrams
and drawings
Copies of records, photographs, and other information
collected during the site visit
Detailed inspection and interview notes and summaries
2. Prepare the Audit Report
The Audit Report should include:
An Executive Summary
Introduction and background to the audit
Audit scope and objectives
Description of audit approach and methodology
Summary of audit findings and recommendations
Conclusions
In particular, the findings summary should comprise the
followings:
Status of compliance with environmental legislative
requirements
Status of conformity with internal environmental policies,
procedures and guidelines
Status of good environmental practices implementation
Level of staff awareness of operational issues relating to
environmental performance
Overall status of environmental performance
Recommendations for environmental performance
improvement
3. Circulate Draft Audit
Report For Comments
Include the following parties on the circulation list:
The Audit Management Committee
Senior audit site management
Site Facilitator(s)
Site personnel with responsibilities for implementing
the major recommendations
Other parties included on the agreed circulation list
4. Final Reporting
Incorporate or resolve all comments received before
producing the Final Report
Issue the report to the Audit Management Committee
and site senior management for endorsement
Output
Final Audit Report addressing
Environmental Legislation compliance status
Departmental environmental policies, procedures and
guide lines conformity status
Status of current environmental performance
Recommendations for performance improvement
Wild life act
The Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 is an Act of
the Parliament of India enacted for protection of plants
and animal species.
It extends to the whole of India, except the State
of Jammu and Kashmir which has its own wildlife act.
It has six schedules which give varying degrees of
protection.
Schedule I and part II of Schedule II provide absolute
protection - offences under these are prescribed the
highest penalties.
Species listed in Schedule III and Schedule IV are also
protected, but the penalties are much lower.
Schedule V includes the animals which may be
hunted.
The specified endemic plants in Schedule VI are
prohibited from cultivation and planting.
This act has been amended seven times – 1982, 1986,
1991, 1993, 2002, 2006 & 2013.
Enforcement authorities have the power to compound
offences under this Schedule (i.e. they impose fines on
the offenders).
Definitions under the Act (Section 2)
Animal - includes amphibians, birds, mammals,
and reptiles, and their young ones, and also includes, in
the cases of birds and reptiles, their eggs.
Animal article - An article made from any captive or
wild animal, other than vermin, and includes an article
or object in which the whole or any part of such animal
has been used and an article made therefrom
Wildlife - includes any animal, bees, butterflies,
crustacean, fish and moths; and aquatic or land
vegetation which forms part of any habitat
Hunting includes
(a) capturing, killing, poisoning, snaring, or trapping any
wild animal, and every attempt to do so
(b) driving any wild animal for any of the purposes specified
in sub clause
(c) injuring, destroying or taking any body part of any such
animal, or in the case of wild birds or reptiles, disturbing or
damaging the eggs or nests of such birds or reptiles.
Taxidermy means the curing, preparation or
preservation of trophies.
Vermin means any wild animal specified in Schedule V.
Trophy means the whole or any part of any captive or
wild animal (other than vermin) which has been kept or
preserved by any means, whether artificial or natural. This
includes:
(a) rugs, skins, and specimens of such animals mounted in
whole or in part through a process of taxidermy
(b) antler, horn, rhinoceros horn, feather, nail, tooth, musk,
eggs, and nests and shells
Uncured trophy means the whole or any part of any
captive animal (other than vermin) which has not
undergone a process of taxidermy. This includes a freshly
killed wild animal, ambergris, musk and other animal
products.
MOTA Act
MOTA stands for “Ministry of Tribal Affairs”
History of MOTA acts & rules:
Forest Rights Act 2006
Protection of Civil Rights Act
Protection of Civil Right Rules
The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
(Prevention of Atrocities) Rules, 1995
The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
(Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989
SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989
SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Rules, 1995
Panchayats Extension to the Scheduled Areas
(PESA) Act 1996
Forest Right Act 2006 (Under MOTA)
Right to hold and live in the forest land under the individual
or common occupation for habitation or for self-cultivation
for livelihood by a member or members of a forest dwelling
Scheduled Tribe or other traditional forest dwellers;
Community rights such as nistar, including those used in
erstwhile Princely states, Zamindari or such intermediary
regimes;
Right of ownership, access to collect, use, and dispose of
minor forest produce (includes all non-timber forest produce
of plant origin) which has been traditionally collected within
or outside village boundaries;
Cont …
Other community rights of uses of entitlements such as fish
and other products of water bodies, grazing and traditional
seasonal resource access of nomadic or pastoralist
communities;
Rights including community tenures of habitat and habitation
for primitive tribal groups and pre-agriculture communities;
Rights in or over disputed lands under any nomenclature in
any State where claims are disputed;
Rights for conversion of Pattas or leases or grants issued by
any local council or any State Govt. on forest lands to titles;
Cont …
Rights of settlement and conversion of all forest villages,
old habitation, unsurveyed villages and other villages in
forest, whether recorded, notified or not into revenue
villages;
Right to protect, regenerate or conserve or manage any
community forest resource which they have been
traditionally protecting and conserving for sustainable use;
Rights which are recognised under any State law or laws of
any Autonomous Dist. Council or Autonomous Regional
Council or which are accepted as rights of tribals under any
traditional or customary law of the concerned tribes of any
State;
Cont …
Right of access to biodiversity and community right to
intellectual property and traditional knowledge related to
biodiversity and cultural diversity;
Any other traditional right customarily enjoyed by the forest
dwelling Scheduled Tribes or other traditional forest
dwellers, as the case may be, which are not mentioned in
clauses-1 to 11, but excluding the traditional right of hunting
or trapping extracting a part of the body of any species of
wild animal
Summary of Rights
Title rights - i.e. ownership - to land that is being farmed by
tribals or forest dwellers as on 13 December 2005, subject
to a maximum of 4 hectares;
Ownership is only for land that is actually being cultivated
by the concerned family as on that date, meaning that no
new lands are granted
Use rights - to minor forest produce (also including
ownership), to grazing areas, to pastoralist routes, etc.
Relief and development rights - to rehabilitation in case of
illegal eviction or forced displacement; and to basic
amenities, subject to restrictions for forest protection
Forest management rights - to protect forests and wildlife