Environment Ministry Frames New Draft
Coastal Regulation Zone Notification
[Press Release dated 19 April 2018]
The Ministry of Environment, Forest and
Climate Change (MoEF&CC) has framed a new draft
Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Notification, 2018. The draft notification has
been uploaded on the Ministry’s website on April 18, 2018. Comments have been
sought from the public within 60 days of the uploading of the draft
Notification
The salient features of the draft CRZ
Notification, 2018 and changes with respect to CRZ Notification, 2011, are as
under:-
(i)
The High Tide Line (HTL)
has been demarcated by the National Centre for Sustainable Coastal Management
(NCSCM) and shall be reckoned as a universal standard for the HTL for all
regulatory purposes under the CRZ Notification, 2018.
(ii)
Hazard line mapping has
also been carried out by Survey of India. The Hazard Line has, however, been
delinked from the CRZ regulatory regime and shall be used only as a tool for
Disaster Management and planning of adaptive and mitigation measures.
(iii)
CRZ limits on land along
the tidal influenced water bodies has been proposed to be reduced from 100
meters or the width of the creek, whichever is less, to 50 meters or the width
of the creek, whichever is less.
(iv) A No Development Zone (NDZ)
of 20 meters has been proposed to be stipulated for all Islands close to the
main land coast and for all Backwater Islands in the main land.
(iv)
For CRZ-III areas, two
separate categories have been proposed viz.:
a. CRZ-III A – Densely populated rural areas with a population
density of 2161 per square kilometre as per 2011
Census. Such areas shall have an NDZ of 50 meters from the HTL as against 200
meters from the HTL stipulated in the CRZ Notification, 2011.
b. CRZ-III B – Rural areas with population density of below 2161
per square kilometre as per 2011 Census. Such areas
shall continue to have an NDZ of 200 meters from the HTL.
(v)
The procedure for CRZ
clearances has been simplified and delegations have been made at various levels
for recommending/according CRZ clearances to the projects/activities. Only such
projects/activities, which are located in the CRZ-I & IV areas, shall be
dealt with for CRZ clearance by the MoEF&CC. For
all other project activities located in CRZ-II/III areas, CRZ clearance shall
be considered at the level of the CZMA.
(vi)
As per CRZ, 2011
Notification, for CRZ-II areas, Floor Space Index (FSI) or the Floor Area Ratio
(FAR) had been frozen at 1991 Development Control Regulation (DCR) levels. In
the Draft CRZ, 2018 Notification, it has been proposed to de-freeze the same
and permit FSI for construction projects, as prevailing on the date of the new
Notification.
(vii)
Temporary tourism
facilities such as shacks, toilet blocks, change rooms, drinking water
facilities etc. have been proposed in Beaches. Such temporary tourism
facilities are also proposed to be permissible in the No Development Zone (NDZ)
of the CRZ-III areas.
(ix) Wherever there is a National or State Level
Highway passing through the NDZ in CRZ-III areas, temporary tourism facilities
have been proposed to be taken up on the seaward site of the roads. On the
landward side of such roads in the NDZ, Resorts/Hotels and other tourism
facilities have also been proposed to be permitted subject to the extant
regulations of the concerned State.
(x) Regulated limestone mining is proposed to be
permitted, subject to strict Environmental safeguards, in areas adequately
above the height of HTL, based on recommendations of reputed National
Institutes in the Mining field.
The relaxations/amendment proposed in the CRZ
Notification, 2018 shall, however, come into force only after the respective
Coastal Zone Management Programme (CZMP) framed to
the CRZ Notification, 2011 have been revised/updated by the States/UTs, as per
the provisions of the CRZ, 2018 Notification and approved by the Ministry of
Environment, Forest & Climate Change.
The Ministry had constituted a Committee under
the Chairmanship of Dr. Shailesh Nayak
to examine the various issues and concerns of Coastal States/UTs and various
other stakeholders and to recommend appropriate changes in the CRZ
Notification, 2011. The report submitted by Dr. Shailesh
Nayak has been examined in the Ministry and
consultations have been held with various stakeholders in this regard.
The MoEF&CC had
received representations from various coastal states/UTs, besides other
stakeholders, for a comprehensive review of the provisions of the CRZ
Notification, 2011, particularly related to the management and conservation of
marine and coastal eco-systems, development in coastal areas, eco-tourism,
livelihood option and sustainable development of coastal communities etc.
The Coastal Regulation Zone Notification was
last reviewed and issued in 2011, with periodic amendments to some clauses.