NGT seeks report from MoEF on Great Indian Bustard

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The NGT Thursday asked the and Forests to submit a detailed report on the deaths of the Great Indian Bustard, after a plea said that 75 per cent of the critically endangered birds have died due to collision with power lines.

The tribunal was hearing a plea filed by the Centre for Wildlife and Litigation, through Gaurav Bansal, seeking directions to the ministry to make bio-diversity impact assessment mandatory for every wind-power project, irrespective of its size or capacity.

The plea said that as per 30th meeting, power lines, especially high-voltage transmission lines with multiple overhead wires, are the most important current threat to the critically endangered species as they have poor frontal vision. It said 75 per cent of the birds have died due to collision with power lines in the past 30 years.

The petitioner has sought a status report on the issue of undergrounding high-risk powerlines in habitats of Thar Desert, Jaisalmer Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, and

It has also sought a report on the issue of installation of bird flight diverter on medium-risk powerlines besides penal action against those transmission companies which have failed to adopt mitigation measures.

The is a bird found on the Indian subcontinent and has a horizontal body and long bare legs, giving it an ostrich like appearance.

It is among the heaviest of the flying birds and the species is critically endangered by hunting and loss of its habitat. It is protected under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.

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First Published: Thu, April 04 2019. 17:35 IST