Telangana's HILT Policy: Shifting Industries for Hyderabad's Green Future

The Telangana government has defended its Hyderabad Industrial Land Transformation (HILT) policy, stating its primary goal is to reduce pollution and protect the city's environment by relocating industries. Industries Minister D. Sridhar Babu clarified that the policy is not merely a land-use change but a foundational move for a sustainable future, addressing the disappearance of buffer zones between factories and homes. The government aims to move industries beyond the Outer Ring Road to provide cleaner air and water, countering opposition allegations of a hidden agenda to sell valuable land. The policy discussion occurred amid a boycott by the main opposition BRS, which has accused the government of giving away industrial land for real estate development.

Key Points: Hyderabad Industrial Land Transformation Policy Aims to Cut Pollution

  • Shift polluting industries beyond Outer Ring Road
  • Protect Hyderabad from environmental crisis
  • Transform former industrial zones into residential areas
  • Ensure clean air and water for future generations
3 min read

Industrial land transformation policy aims to protect Hyderabad, says minister

Telangana defends HILT policy to move polluting industries beyond ORR, ensuring clean air and water for future generations of Hyderabad.

"This is a healthy foundation that our government is laying for our children and future generations. - D. Sridhar Babu"

Hyderabad, Jan 6

The Telangana government on Tuesday defended the Hyderabad Industrial Land Transformation policy, saying it is aimed at reducing pollution in the state capital and protecting it from environmental crisis by shifting polluting industries out of the city.

Industries Minister D. Sridhar Babu told the Assembly that the government headed by Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy has taken the historic initiative to ensure a clean and sustainable future for the coming generations.

Referring to the allegations by the opposition parties, he said some people were deliberately attacking the government and claiming a hidden agenda in this policy.

"Many are seeing this as merely a simple land transformation. They are looking at this only from the perspective of revenue records, saying land use is changing, an industrial area is turning into a residential area, but through this Assembly, I want to clarify that it is not merely a change of land use. This is a healthy foundation that our government is laying for our children and future generations," he said.

Sridhar Babu said that it is the responsibility of the present generation to protect natural resources and ensure their survival for the future.

"Our intention is not just to make changes and additions to the revenue records through this policy. Our resolve is to shift the industries beyond the Outer Ring Road (ORR) and provide our children and future generations with clean air to breathe and clean water to drink," he said.

The minister recalled that Hyderabad's industrial journey began in the 1970s with the arrival of IDPL. At that time, areas like Balanagar, Sanathnagar, Uppal, Jeedimetla, and Cherlapally were designated as exclusive industrial zones. Back then, these areas were on the outskirts of the city, kilometres away from residential areas, and, at that time, the presence of industries there did not pose any threat to public health.

"In the last 50 years, the city of Hyderabad expanded in ways we couldn't have imagined, becoming a metropolis on the world map. These industrial areas, which were once on the outskirts, have now become the central business districts of the city. They are residential colonies where lakhs of families live," he said.

The minister pointed out that today an apartment building stands right next to the factory wall. The toxic smoke from the chimney, instead of dissipating into the air, is entering directly into the bedrooms. On one side, there are residential buildings, and on the other, industries. The 'buffer zone' between the two has completely disappeared. He said this was not merely a planning flaw, but a blatant invitation to a major disaster.

The short discussion on HILT policy took place in the absence of the main opposition Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS), which is boycotting the session.

The BRS had alleged that in the name of HILT, the Congress government is selling away 9,300 acres of industrial land worth almost Rs 5 lakh crore.

BRS Working President K. T. Rama Rao claimed that the lands that were once given by the government to industries to create jobs for people are now being given to private individuals.

The government is giving industrial lands to build apartments, villas and commercial complexes as it does not want industries, he alleged.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
While the intent sounds good, the BRS allegations are concerning. 9300 acres is a massive amount of land. The government must ensure complete transparency. This shouldn't become another real estate bonanza for a few builders at the cost of public assets.
K
Karthik V
The minister is absolutely right about the buffer zones vanishing. My office is in Balanagar and the residential complexes have come up right next to factory compounds. It's a planning failure of past decades. Correcting it now is tough but necessary.
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Sarah B
What about the jobs? If industries are moved far out, what happens to the thousands of workers? Will there be adequate public transport to the new locations? The policy needs a detailed rehabilitation and transit plan, not just an environmental vision.
A
Aman W
Finally! Hyderabad's growth was chaotic. We need sustainable development. Clean air and water for our children is the top priority. Hope they execute this well and don't get distracted by political mudslinging.
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Varun X
The BRS boycotting the discussion says a lot. They should have been there to debate and ask questions, not run away. Both sides need to put Hyderabad's future above politics. Let's have a proper white paper on the financial aspects and land use.

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