Key Points

Himachal Pradesh Minister Rajesh Dharmani is calling for urgent compensation from both national and global bodies for Himalayan states suffering climate disasters. He personally experienced evacuation when landslides threatened his official residence in Shimla this week. The minister argues that industrial states with high emissions should support mountain regions that preserve vital ecological services. Himachal is implementing strict construction regulations and afforestation policies to mitigate future disaster risks.

Key Points: Himachal Minister Rajesh Dharmani Demands Carbon Compensation for Himalayan States

  • Minister Dharmani evacuated after landslide near Shimla residence
  • Calls for GST Council compensation for Himalayan ecological services
  • Proposes strict no-construction zones on landslide-prone slopes
  • Advocates for scientific afforestation with 100 trees per extraction
4 min read

Himachal Pradesh Minister Rajesh Dharmani calls for national and global compensation for mountain states

Himachal Minister Rajesh Dharmani calls for national and global compensation for mountain states bearing the brunt of climate change and repeated disasters.

"Globally, the Kyoto Protocol recognised that heavily polluting countries must support developing nations - Rajesh Dharmani"

Shimla, August 19

Rajesh Dharmani, Town and Country Planning and Technical Education Minister of Himachal Pradesh, on Tuesday stated that the impact of global carbon emissions were being disproportionately borne by Himalayan states, which had been facing repeated mountain disasters, further bringing to attention how no compensation was being provided either at the international or national levels.

He further stated that the need of the hour was to bring a plan to regulate the entire state.

Speaking to ANI, Dharmani revealed that he, along with two Congress MLAs and the Chief Minister's IT advisor, had to vacate their official residences in Shimla on Monday night after heavy rain triggered a landslide and uprooted trees in Benmore and Ramchandra Chowk areas of the state capital. They have been shifted temporarily to government guest houses.

"It was around 11:30 pm when a loud explosion was heard in Ramchandra Chowk. Power supply snapped, and behind my residence, an old building housing around 40 people had to be evacuated. Families and children rushed out in panic. I immediately and called on the emergency numbers. Police, rescue teams and local councillors reached the spot, and later, we were advised by the PWD to vacate the residences as water pipelines and trees had collapsed, causing further risk," Dharmani told ANI.

The minister further stated that he was not the only one affected due to the landslides and floods.

"Along with me, MLAs Ramkumar Chaudhary and Ashish Butail, as well as the Chief Minister's IT advisor Gokul Patel, were also shifted. Around 40-45 local residents living in the adjoining block were evacuated to safer places, with arrangements made in government rest houses and guest houses, including the Haryana government rest house in Shimla and accommodation at Dharamshala facilitated by MLA Ashish Butail," he explained.

Highlighting the high-level damage caused by the natural disasters, Dharmani stated that there was a need to assess, study and develop risk-reduction strategies to minimise the losses.

"We need scientific studies, disaster loss assessments, and effective risk-reduction strategies. Some disasters like earthquakes and lightning are beyond control, but their damage can be minimised through strict planning norms, as seen in Japan. At the same time, human activities like unregulated construction, industrial emissions, and pesticide overuse are worsening vulnerabilities," he noted.

The minister stressed that despite Himachal's proactive environmental policies, such as banning large-scale tree felling and promoting green energy, the state had been left without fair compensation.

"At the recent GST Council meeting, I urged the Union Finance Minister that the Himalayan states must be compensated. Globally, the Kyoto Protocol recognised that heavily polluting countries must support developing nations. Similarly, within India, industrial states with higher carbon emissions should support hill states like Himachal, which preserve glaciers, forests, and generate oxygen. We are providing ecological services, and we must be compensated," Dharmani said.

He further outlined a series of regulatory steps being taken through the Town and Country Planning (TCP) department.

He said the steps taken includes declaring no-construction zones within 5 meters vertically and 7 meters horizontally in landslide-prone slopes, making TCP approval mandatory for construction above 650 square meters in urban and special development areas, preparing regional development plans for Shimla, Kullu, and Kangra, and extending it across the state in collaboration with the School of Planning and Architecture among another measures.

Dharmani added that retrofitting old, vulnerable structures, regulating dumping sites for road projects, and empowering Panchayati Raj institutions to approve rural construction maps are among the next interventions.

"Every tree has a life cycle, but instead of indiscriminate removal, we need scientific afforestation. For every tree extracted, we should plant at least 100 more. Recently, the High Court has directed that Tara Devi Hill Zone be declared a complete green zone with no construction allowed," he said, answering a question on the afforestation of Delodar pine trees in Shimla, which are damaging life and properties.

Calling the current crisis a "wake-up call," the minister said that Himachal Pradesh would pursue both local planning reforms and push for stronger national and global commitments to safeguard fragile mountain ecosystems.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good points but our own state government must first stop illegal constructions. Every year same story - landslides, evacuations, then back to building hotels on fragile slopes. Practice what you preach!
A
Anjali F
As someone from Uttarakhand, I completely relate. Our mountains are collapsing while Delhi and Mumbai get all the development funds. Mountain states are India's ecological shield - we deserve compensation! 🙏
S
Sarah B
The 5m/7m construction buffer zone is a good start. Hope they implement it strictly. Shimla's beauty is being destroyed by concrete jungle. Save our hills! ❤️
V
Vikram M
Developed nations caused this climate crisis, they should pay. But also our own industries in Punjab, Haryana, Gujarat need to contribute to Himalayan conservation fund.
K
Karthik V
Good to see a minister actually experiencing what common people face during disasters. Hope this translates into real action, not just speeches.
N
Nisha Z
Planting 100 trees for every tree cut sounds great but who will monitor? We need independent environmental auditors, not just government promises.

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