Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) are ecologically fragile buffer areas surrounding protected sites such as national parks and wildlife sanctuaries in India, officially notified by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) to regulate human activities and preserve surrounding biodiversity.[1][2] The primary purpose of ESZs is to function as "shock absorbers" for these specialized ecosystems, mitigating external pressures like habitat fragmentation and pollution by prohibiting destructive practices—such as mining, large-scale industries, and unregulated tourism—while permitting sustainable development under zonal master plans prepared by state governments.[2][3] Typically extending up to 10 kilometers from protected area boundaries (with variations based on terrain, such as narrower zones in hilly regions), ESZs have been mandated nationwide following a 2022 Supreme Court directive, leading to notifications for over 90 such zones by 2023, though implementation has sparked debates over balancing conservation with local livelihoods in densely populated rural areas.[4][5] These zones derive from 2011 MoEFCC guidelines, which emphasize site-specific assessments to avoid blanket restrictions that could hinder legitimate economic activities, reflecting ongoing tensions between ecological protection and developmental imperatives in India's diverse landscapes.[6]
Definition and Purpose
Core Definition
An Eco-Sensitive Zone (ESZ), also referred to as an ecologically fragile area, constitutes a designated buffer region encircling protected areas such as national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, and biosphere reserves in India, formally notified by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC). These zones are established to mitigate external pressures on core ecosystems by imposing graduated restrictions on developmental activities, thereby preserving biodiversity, natural resources, and ecological processes. The concept draws from the need to address anthropogenic threats like habitat fragmentation and pollution that extend beyond protected area boundaries.[5][2]The delineation of ESZs typically encompasses a radial distance of up to 10 kilometers from the protected area's perimeter, adjustable based on factors including topography, watershed characteristics, and the degree of ecological vulnerability; for instance, narrower extents (0-10 km) apply in arid regions like Rajasthan to accommodate practical constraints. Notification occurs under Section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, following proposals from state governments or expert committees, with the MoEFCC issuing final declarations via gazette notifications. As of March 2023, over 90 such zones had been notified, covering approximately 2.3% of India's land area, emphasizing their role in creating "shock absorbers" for specialized ecosystems.[5][2][7]Within ESZs, prohibited activities include large-scale mining, industrial units, and unregulated tourism, while permissible ones—such as eco-tourism, organic farming, and small-scale infrastructure—are subject to environmental impact assessments and zoning plans prepared by state authorities. This framework aims to foster sustainable land use without blanket bans, balancing conservation imperatives with local livelihoods, though implementation varies due to site-specific ecological data and socio-economic considerations.[5][2]
Environmental Objectives
The environmental objectives of Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) focus on establishing buffer areas around protected ecosystems, such as national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, to mitigate external pressures from human activities and preserve ecological integrity. These zones act as "shock absorbers" that regulate land and water use, preventing habitat fragmentation and isolation of biodiversity patches, which could otherwise compromise long-term species survival and ecosystem functionality.[5][2]Central to these objectives is the enhancement of biodiversity conservation by maintaining connectivity between core habitats and surrounding landscapes, thereby supporting wildlife movement, genetic diversity, and natural processes like pollination and seed dispersal. Restrictions on activities such as deforestation, mining, and unregulated urbanization aim to curb pollution, soil erosion, and alterations to hydrological regimes that threaten fragile ecosystems.[6][8]ESZs also promote sustainable resource management to sustain ecological services, including carbon sequestration, water purification, and flood regulation, while fostering resilience against climate variability. By prohibiting or limiting high-impact interventions, these zones ensure that developmental externalities do not degrade the viability of adjacent protected areas, aligning with broader goals of in-situ conservation under India's wildlifeprotection framework.[2][6]
Balancing Conservation and Development
Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India are designed to regulate human activities in ecologically fragile buffer areas surrounding protected zones, such as national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, thereby mitigating impacts on biodiversity while accommodating sustainable local livelihoods. The framework classifies land-use activities into prohibited, regulated, and permitted categories to enforce this equilibrium. Prohibited activities, including commercial mining, establishment of sawmills, and setting up polluting industries like cement or chemical plants, aim to prevent irreversible habitat degradation and pollution that could cascade into core protected areas. Regulated activities, such as eco-tourism infrastructure, hydroelectric projects, and expansion of existing villages, require prior environmental impact assessments (EIAs) and approvals from state-level committees to ensure minimal ecological disruption. Permitted activities encompass traditional agriculture, horticulture, rainwater harvesting, and renewable energy initiatives like solar power, which support rural economies without compromising ecosystem services.[5][9]Central to this balancing mechanism is the preparation of a Zonal Master Plan (ZMP) by state governments, which must integrate conservation priorities with development needs within a specified timeframe, typically one year post-notification. The ZMP delineates land-use zoning, promotes restoration of degraded areas, and fosters community involvement through eco-development committees, drawing on empirical assessments of local ecology and socio-economic conditions. For instance, in ESZs around the Western Ghats, guidelines have historically restricted large-scale mining—responsible for habitat fragmentation affecting species like the lion-tailed macaque—while allowing regulated agroforestry to sustain farmer incomes. However, implementation challenges arise from the one-size-fits-all approach in early guidelines, which overlook site-specific variations in topography, population density, and existing land use, leading to over 20% of India's land potentially falling under ESZ influence by 2022 notifications.[4][10]Tensions between conservation imperatives and developmental aspirations have manifested in legal and policy disputes, exemplified by the Supreme Court's 2022 directive mandating a default 1 km ESZ radius around protected areas, which covered approximately 1.28 lakh sq km but faced pushback for encroaching on agricultural and residential lands supporting millions. States like Maharashtra and Karnataka argued that rigid prohibitions stifled infrastructure projects essential for economic growth, such as highways and renewable energy corridors, prompting the central government to initiate a review of ESZ guidelines in July 2025 to incorporate flexibility via site-specific plans approved by the National Board for Wildlife (NBWL). Empirical data from notified ESZs indicate that while biodiversity metrics, such as wildlife sightings in buffer zones, have improved in areas with strict enforcement (e.g., reduced poaching incidents by 15-20% in select sanctuaries), livelihood disruptions have spurred human-wildlife conflicts, including crop raids affecting over 50,000 farmers annually in regions like the Nilgiris. This underscores the causal linkage between unregulated expansion and ecological decline, yet highlights the need for evidence-based zoning that quantifies trade-offs, such as through GIS mapping of habitat corridors versus settlement patterns.[11][12][6]Ongoing evaluations emphasize adaptive management, where monitoring via satellite imagery and ground surveys informs periodic ZMP revisions, ensuring that development gains, like eco-tourism revenues exceeding ₹500 crore in some ESZs by 2023, fund conservation without eroding fragile ecosystems. Critics from state administrations contend that blanket regulations, influenced by judicial interventions, prioritize urban-centric environmentalism over rural realities, potentially exacerbating illegal encroachments as seen in 30% of pre-notified buffer areas. Proponents counter with data showing that lax enforcement correlates with accelerated deforestation rates—India lost 2.33 million hectares of tree cover between 2001 and 2022, much in biodiversity hotspots—advocating for stricter causal accountability in activity approvals to sustain long-term ecological resilience alongside equitable development.[13][14]
Legal Framework
Statutory Authority
The declaration of Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India is authorized under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 (EPA), which grants the Central Government broad powers to safeguard and enhance environmental quality by regulating potentially harmful human activities.[15] Enacted on May 23, 1986, in response to the Bhopal disaster, Section 3(1) of the EPA empowers the government to adopt "all such measures as it deems necessary or expedient" for environmental protection, including the identification and notification of ecologically fragile areas.[15] This provision enables the imposition of restrictions or prohibitions on industrial operations, land use, and development within specified zones to prevent ecological degradation.[15]Section 3(2)(v) and (xiv) further support ESZ notifications by allowing the constitution of authorities for enforcement and the establishment of standards for emissions or discharges that could impact sensitive ecosystems. The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) serves as the primary notifying body, issuing gazette notifications that delineate ESZ boundaries and prescribe regulated activities, typically around national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, and biosphere reserves.[5] These notifications derive directly from state government proposals or recommendations by the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife, ensuring alignment with site-specific ecological vulnerabilities.[16]The EPA's framework positions ESZs as "shock absorbers" for protected areas, with notifications mandating compliance through state-level monitoring committees that oversee prohibitions on activities like mining, large-scale industrialization, and unregulated tourism.[5] Over 600 such zones have been notified as of 2024, reflecting the Act's application in balancing conservation imperatives against developmental pressures, though enforcement varies by jurisdiction due to reliance on subordinate rules and guidelines issued under the EPA, such as the 2011 MoEFCC framework.[7] Judicial interventions, including Supreme Court directives since 2018 mandating minimum 1-km buffers (later modified in 2023), reinforce but do not supplant the statutory foundation in the EPA.[16]
Notification Process
The notification of Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India is conducted by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) under Section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, which empowers the central government to take measures for protecting and improving the environment by restricting certain activities in specified areas.[17] State governments typically initiate the process by submitting proposals to the MoEFCC, identifying potential ESZ boundaries around protected areas such as national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, guided by the 2011 framework that recommends extents up to 10 km unless ecologically justified otherwise.[5][6]The procedure follows principles of natural justice, incorporating public consultation to ensure stakeholder input, as outlined in standard practices under the Environment (Protection) Rules, 1986. The MoEFCC first prepares a draft notification detailing the geographical coordinates, maps, prohibited and regulated activities (e.g., bans on mining or large-scale industries), and any site-specific relaxations.[18] This draft is published in the Official Gazette of India and at least two vernacular newspapers circulating in the affected region, inviting written objections and suggestions from the public, local authorities, and the concerned state government within 60 days from the date of publication.[17] For instance, draft notifications, such as S.O. 1875(E) dated June 9, 2020, for Karanja Sohol Wildlife Sanctuary, explicitly call for comments during this period.[17]Upon receipt, the MoEFCC examines the objections, which may include representations from residents, industries, or state officials concerned about development impacts; it may seek clarifications from the state government or convene consultations through expert committees.[6] Factors like ecological sensitivity, habitat continuity, and practical feasibility influence revisions, with the National Board for Wildlife's recommendations often integrated for alignment with conservation priorities.[4] If objections warrant changes, a re-draft may be issued, as seen in S.O. 2970(E) dated July 2, 2025, for Deeper Beel Wildlife Sanctuary.[19]The final notification is issued by the central government after due consideration, published in the Official Gazette, and takes effect immediately or from a specified date, legally binding the area with enforceable restrictions.[17] Following notification, the state government must prepare a Zonal Master Plan within two years, integrating land use regulations, which requires approval from the MoEFCC and involves further stakeholder mapping of existing activities.[20] This process has faced delays in some cases due to interstate disputes or high objection volumes, but it ensures evidence-based demarcation prioritizing biodiversity over unchecked expansion.[6]
Regulatory Powers
The regulatory powers governing Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India are vested primarily in the Central Government through the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), under Section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, which authorizes measures to protect and improve environmental quality, including restricting or prohibiting activities in ecologically fragile areas.[15] These powers enable the notification of ESZs as buffer zones around protected areas, with each notification specifying a tailored set of regulations rather than uniform prohibitions, emphasizing site-specific delineation to regulate developmental pressures without unduly curtailing sustainable uses.[3]Notifications typically categorize activities into prohibited, regulated, and permitted classes to balance conservation with local needs. Prohibited activities often include mining operations, establishment of new sawmills or brick kilns, commercial firewood collection, and disposal of untreated sewage or effluents, aimed at preventing irreversible ecological degradation.[21] Regulated activities, such as construction of buildings exceeding 20,000 square meters, setting up of hotels or resorts, or expansion of existing industries, require prior environmental clearance from designated authorities like the State Environment Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA) or district-level committees, ensuring compliance with carrying capacity assessments.[22] Permitted activities generally encompass ongoing traditional agriculture, rainwater harvesting, and small-scale eco-tourism, fostering regulated economic continuity for resident communities.[23]Enforcement involves state-level mechanisms, including the constitution of an Eco-Sensitive Zone MonitoringCommittee or ManagementAuthority by the respective state government, tasked with preparing a Zonal Master Plan within two years of notification, reviewing development proposals, and monitoring adherence to restrictions.[24] This plan delineates land-use zoning, integrates biodiversity conservation, and addresses infrastructure needs, with the committee empowered to recommend approvals or penalties for violations, drawing on powers under the Act's Section 15 for prosecution and fines up to ₹1 lakh or imprisonment.[15] State pollution control boards and forest departments handle day-to-day oversight, though the Central Government's oversight ensures uniformity, with regulations designed as facilitative controls rather than absolute bans unless ecologically imperative.[6] Violations attract penalties under the Act, reinforcing the regulatory framework's emphasis on prevention over cure.[15]
Historical Development
Origins in Policy
The legal foundation for eco-sensitive zones in India lies in the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, which grants the central government authority under Section 3 to regulate activities in ecologically fragile areas to prevent environmental degradation.[5] Early policy applications of this framework included the 1991 notification declaring Dahanu Taluka in Maharashtra an ecologically fragile area, which imposed restrictions on new industries and mining to safeguard coastal ecosystems.[25]Policy conceptualization advanced in 2000 with the Pronab Sen Committee's report to the Ministry of Environment and Forests, which outlined criteria for identifying fragile ecosystems and proposed eco-sensitive zones as regulatory buffers rather than outright prohibitions.[25] This built on judicial precedents, such as the Supreme Court's 1993 ban on mining in Doon Valley, Uttarakhand, which highlighted the need for zoning to control extractive activities near sensitive terrains.[25]The modern policy origin is tied to the 21st meeting of the Indian Board for Wildlife on January 21, 2002, where the National Wildlife Action Plan (2002-2016) was endorsed, recommending the delineation of ecologically sensitive areas around protected zones like national parks and wildlife sanctuaries to act as buffers against habitat fragmentation and pollution.[6] The plan advocated site-specific notifications under the 1986 Act to balance conservation with regulated development, marking a shift from exclusionary protected area models to integrated zoning.[25]Initial notifications followed, with the Mahabaleshwar Plateau in Maharashtra designated as India's first eco-sensitive area in 2000, preceding formal guidelines and focusing on hill station vulnerabilities to tourism and urbanization.[26] By 2005, policy evolved to emphasize state-submitted proposals for tailored zones, addressing interstate resistance to uniform 10 km buffers proposed in 2002.[25]
Evolution of Guidelines
The concept of eco-sensitive zones (ESZs) around protected areas in India emerged from recommendations in the 1980s and 1990s, influenced by international conservation models and domestic policy needs under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, but formal guidelines evolved primarily in response to inconsistent state-level implementations. Early efforts, such as the World Bank-supported India Eco-Development Project from 1996 to 2004, tested buffer zone models near protected areas to balance conservation with local livelihoods, laying groundwork for regulated rather than blanket prohibitions.[6] By 2005, the National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) shifted toward site-specific delineations, emphasizing activity regulation over outright bans to address ecological fragility without stifling development, a departure from earlier ad-hoc notifications.[27]The pivotal formalization occurred on February 9, 2011, when the Ministry of Environment and Forests (now Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change) issued comprehensive guidelines for ESZ declaration around national parks and wildlife sanctuaries. These guidelines, notified under Section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, provided an indicative framework for states to propose ESZs, typically extending 10 km from protected area boundaries unless site-specific factors justified variations, and categorized activities into prohibited (e.g., mining, large-scale industries), regulated (e.g., eco-tourism with limits), and promoted (e.g., organic farming).[4][5] They mandated consultation with state governments, public hearings, and preparation of zonal master plans within three years of notification, aiming to create "shock absorbers" for biodiversity while allowing flexibility for human habitations, particularly in densely populated regions like the Himalayas.[4]Post-2011 refinements addressed implementation gaps, with clarifications issued by the ministry in 2013 and 2018 to streamline notifications, permit minor proposal changes during draft stages, and integrate ESZ plans with existing land-use policies, responding to delays in over 400 pending proposals by emphasizing evidence-based boundaries using ecological criteria like wildlife corridors and watershed integrity.[4] Judicial oversight accelerated evolution; the Supreme Court in 2022 mandated a default 1-km ESZ for all protected areas to enforce uniformity, but by April 2023, it modified this to revert to site-specific extents under the 2011 framework, citing undue restrictions on development in states like Maharashtra and Karnataka.[27]As of July 2025, the Standing Committee of the NBWL initiated a review of the 2011 guidelines to enhance site-specificity and flexibility, driven by state concerns over blanket regulations impacting agriculture and infrastructure in over 600 notified ESZs covering 1.28% of India's land. This proposed revision seeks to incorporate updated ecological data and socio-economic assessments, potentially categorizing activities more granularly while maintaining core prohibitions on high-impact threats like deforestation, amid criticisms that rigid guidelines overlook regional variations in biodiversity pressure and human density.[28][29]
Pre-2011 Context
The concept of eco-sensitive zones in India emerged from early efforts to establish buffer areas around protected wildlife habitats to curb habitat degradation and human-wildlife conflicts. Under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972, which established national parks and sanctuaries, peripheral zones were implicitly recognized as critical for maintaining ecological integrity, though without mandatory central notifications until later.[30] The Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, provided the statutory basis for designating ecologically fragile areas via Section 3, enabling restrictions on activities threatening environmental stability, but initial applications focused on broader sensitive regions rather than standardized buffers around protected areas.[31]A pivotal advancement occurred with the adoption of the Wildlife Conservation Strategy on January 21, 2002, during the 21st meeting of the Indian Board for Wildlife. This strategy explicitly recommended notifying lands within 10 kilometers of national park and sanctuary boundaries as eco-fragile zones to regulate development, mining, and other pressures that could fragment habitats or introduce invasive species. [6] The measure addressed empirical evidence of edge effects—where proximity to human activity increases vulnerability to poaching, pollution, and encroachment—drawing on assessments of India's 700 protected areas, which covered only about 4% of the country's land by 2002.[25]Between 2002 and 2011, implementations remained ad-hoc, with notifications issued case-by-case under the 1986 Act in response to localized threats rather than a national protocol. Examples include the eco-sensitive zone around Sultanpur National Park, notified to restrict incompatible land uses and preserve migratory bird habitats amid urban expansion pressures from nearby Delhi.[5] Similarly, early designations in regions like the Deccan Plateau in 2000 highlighted fragile ecosystems beyond strict protected areas, prohibiting activities such as large-scale mining to prevent soil erosion and biodiversity loss.[26] These efforts underscored causal links between unregulated peripheral development and core habitat decline, yet inconsistencies in extent, criteria, and enforcement—often varying by state—limited effectiveness, prompting calls for uniform guidelines by the late 2000s.[31]
Guidelines and Extent
2011 Framework and Updates
The Ministry of Environment and Forests issued the "Guidelines for Declaration of Eco-Sensitive Zones around National Parks and Wildlife Sanctuaries" on February 9, 2011, providing a structured framework for states and union territories to propose and notify ESZs as buffers to mitigate external pressures on protected areas.[5] These guidelines emphasize regulating land use and activities within ESZs to serve as "shock absorbers," preventing habitat fragmentation, pollution, and human-wildlife conflict while allowing sustainable development.[5] The delineation criteria include ecological vulnerability, such as floral and faunal diversity, watershed integrity, and migratory corridors, alongside socio-economic factors like existing settlements and agriculture; ESZ extent is typically capped at 10 kilometers from protected area boundaries but can extend beyond for critical habitats or shrink below for densely populated areas, determined via site-specific assessments including carrying capacity studies.[5][32]The notification process outlined requires state governments to submit detailed proposals to the central ministry, incorporating topographic maps (1:50,000 scale), land-use classifications, demographic data, and vulnerability mapping prepared with input from institutions like the Wildlife Institute of India; public hearings must address stakeholder objections before draft notifications are published in the Official Gazette for 60 days of feedback, followed by final central approval under Section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.[5] The framework categorizes activities into prohibited (e.g., commercial logging, large-scale mining), regulated (e.g., eco-tourism with limits, non-polluting industries), and permitted (e.g., ongoing agriculture, rainwater harvesting), with Zonal Master Plans mandated for long-term management integrating conservation and local livelihoods.[5] Enforcement relies on state-level monitoring committees, with violations attracting penalties under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, or Environment (Protection) Act.[5]Subsequent clarifications have refined implementation without altering core provisions; for instance, a 2013 advisory specified flexible ESZ radii (0-10 km) for states like Rajasthan based on practical topography and sensitivity gradients, allowing exclusions for strategic infrastructure if ecologically justified.[7] No comprehensive amendments to the 2011 guidelines have been enacted as of October 2025, though the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife announced in July 2025 a review to enhance site-specific flexibility, addressing criticisms that uniform 10 km buffers overlook regional variations in ecology and human density.[28] This proposed revisit aims to balanceconservation with socio-economic realities, potentially incorporating advanced geospatial tools for delineation, but awaits formal revision.[29]
Buffer Zone Determination
The extent of buffer zones within eco-sensitive areas is delineated on a site-specific basis under the 2011 guidelines issued by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, which prescribe a maximum width of 10 kilometers from the boundary of protected areas such as national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, while allowing flexibility to adapt to local conditions. This approach recognizes that uniform application could overlook variations in terrain, ecological connectivity, and anthropogenic pressures, potentially leading to ineffective conservation or undue economic restrictions; instead, the width is calibrated to encompass areas where activities might directly impinge on the protected core, such as through habitat fragmentation or pollution runoff.[5][7]Key criteria for determination include topographic features like slope gradients exceeding 20% (which may limit zone expansion due to erosion risks), hydrological patterns such as upstream watersheds that influence water quality in the protected area, and biodiversity indicators like the presence of endangered species or migration corridors requiring contiguous protection. Human-related factors, including population density above 100 persons per square kilometer (indicating higher development pressure) and existing land uses like agriculture or settlements, are assessed via GIS mapping and field surveys to avoid displacing communities unnecessarily while prioritizing zones with high ecological fragility. State governments initiate demarcation through carrying capacity studies and stakeholder consultations, followed by review from the central Expert Committee on Eco-Sensitive Zones, which evaluates proposals for alignment with empirical data on ecosystem services.[7][6]Judicial oversight has standardized aspects of this process; the Supreme Court's 2022 directive in the T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad case mandated a minimum 1-kilometer buffer and maximum 10 kilometers for all protected areas, with deviations permitted only upon submission of scientific evidence demonstrating negligible impact beyond these limits, such as in cases of interstate boundaries or urban proximity. This ruling addressed inconsistencies in prior notifications, where some zones exceeded 10 kilometers (e.g., certain tiger reserves) without rigorous justification, aiming to balance conservation imperatives with verifiable ecological thresholds rather than arbitrary extensions. By 2025, over 400 such zones have been notified, with extents varying from 1 to 10 kilometers based on these criteria, though ongoing reviews seek greater state autonomy to incorporate updated remote sensing data on deforestation rates and species distribution.[33][11]
Prohibited and Permitted Activities
In Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) notified under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, activities are categorized into prohibited, regulated, and permitted to minimize ecological degradation while allowing sustainable land use, with classifications determined on a site-specific basis as outlined in the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) guidelines issued on February 9, 2011.[5] These guidelines emphasize regulation over outright bans where feasible, requiring proposals to include an inventory of activities to be prohibited or controlled, tailored to local ecology, socio-economic conditions, and existing land use patterns.[7] Notifications for specific ESZs, such as those around national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, must explicitly list prohibited and regulated activities, ensuring compliance with broader environmental laws like the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.[20]Prohibited activities, intended to prevent irreversible harm, include commercial mining, establishment of sawmills, polluting industries (those emitting air, water, or soil pollutants), major hydroelectric projects exceeding 25 MW capacity, large-scale commercial deforestation, and disposal of untreated sewage or industrial effluents into water bodies.[34][9] These restrictions aim to curb activities with high ecological footprints, though enforcement varies by notification and judicial oversight. Heavy earth-moving operations and setting up units for brick, jelly stone, or sand manufacturing are also typically banned to avoid habitat fragmentation and soil erosion.[35]Permitted activities focus on low-impact, traditional, or restorative uses, such as ongoing agriculture, horticulture, silviculture, and animal husbandry by local communities, provided they do not involve expansion into new areas or conversion of forest land.[34][9] Eco-tourism, small-scale rainwater harvesting, and construction for bona fide local residential needs (e.g., up to two stories in existing villages) are allowed, alongside promotion of organic farming and renewable energy like solar power to support sustainable development.[32] Regulated activities, bridging the two categories, include tourism infrastructure, rural road widening (limited to single lane), and small hydroelectric projects under 25 MW, subject to environmental impact assessments and carrying capacity limits.[34] Site-specific notifications may adapt these lists, as seen in variations across states, reflecting empirical assessments of biodiversity sensitivity rather than uniform application.[6]
Implementation and Variations
State-Level Notifications
State governments propose Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) around protected areas to the central Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), which issues formal notifications under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, after review by an expert committee.[17] States then prepare mandatory Zonal Master Plans within one year of notification to regulate activities, reflecting local ecological and socioeconomic conditions.[36] This process allows variations in ESZ extent, often limited to 0-10 km as per 2011 guidelines, with some states opting for narrower buffers near infrastructure or urban areas to accommodate development needs.[7]Rajasthan has notified multiple ESZs, including Jamwaramgarh Wildlife Sanctuary on December 18, 2018 (S.O. 6212(E)), and Bandh Baretha Wildlife Sanctuary on December 26, 2018 (S.O. 6319(E)), with subsequent amendments on May 18, 2020 (S.O. 1929(E)).[37]Gujarat tracks ESZ proposals for sanctuaries like Gir (115,342 ha proposed) and Paniya (3,964 ha), with ongoing central approvals as of recent updates.[38] Jharkhand notified nine ESZs around protected areas, covering enclaves and buffers up to 10 km, including Palkot Wildlife Sanctuary (183.18 sq km, originally S.O. 1174 dated March 23, 1990, under prior Bihar jurisdiction).[39]Karnataka issued state-level orders supporting central notifications, such as for Adichunchanagiri Peacock Sanctuary (S.O. 3032(E), September 7, 2020) and Arabithittu Wildlife Sanctuary.[40] However, implementation varies; some states, including those with pending infrastructure like highways, have proposed or accepted minimal ESZs (e.g., 0 km for 60 national parks as of 2023), prioritizing economic activities over expansive buffers despite central guidelines.[41] By early 2024, over 400 ESZs were notified nationwide, with state proposals driving the pace but often constrained by local development pressures.[23]
These notifications emphasize regulated activities like eco-tourism while prohibiting mining in core zones, though enforcement relies on state capacity, leading to inconsistencies across regions.
Site-Specific Adaptations
The delineation of Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) around protected areas in India is conducted on a site-specific basis, accounting for local ecological features, terrain, wildlife corridors, human settlements, and socio-economic dependencies to balance conservation with sustainable development.[7] Factors such as slope gradients, forest density, and proximity to urban centers influence the extent and regulatory stringency, deviating from uniform buffers to prevent undue restrictions on viable land uses.[6] This approach stems from 2011 Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) guidelines, which emphasize regulation over blanket prohibitions, with boundaries proposed by state governments and finalized after scrutiny by a central expert committee evaluating site-unique data like carrying capacity assessments and biodiversity inventories.[5]Width of ESZs varies significantly across sites; while a default range of 1-10 kilometers applies, narrower zones are adopted in constrained terrains, such as 25-50 meters around Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary in Sikkim, reduced further on slopes exceeding 45 degrees to accommodate steep topography without encompassing excessive uninhabitable land.[42] In contrast, broader extents up to several kilometers have been notified for flatter, ecologically contiguous areas like those around Keoladeo National Park, incorporating specific hydrological features such as the Ghana canal and Ajan bandh to safeguard migratory bird habitats. States often propose minimal radii—e.g., 0-1 kilometer for Kugti Wildlife Sanctuary in Himachal Pradesh—prioritizing core conservation while minimizing impacts on peripheral agriculture and villages, subject to MoEFCC approval based on empirical site surveys.[43]Regulations on activities within ESZs are similarly adapted; prohibited developments like large-scale mining or polluting industries are standard, but permissions for eco-tourism, organic farming, or non-polluting enterprises are granted where site conditions permit, as outlined in state-submitted inventories reviewed centrally. For instance, Zonal Master Plans, mandated within two years of notification, incorporate site-specific land-use zoning, such as restricting resorts in densely forested buffers while allowing regulated rainwater harvesting in arid-adjacent zones like Sajjangarh Wildlife Sanctuary. [44] In multi-state ecosystems like the Western Ghats, adaptations reflect interstate discrepancies, with six draft notifications by August 2024 adjusting boundaries per state proposals to address varying development pressures.[45]As of July 2025, the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife recommended revising ESZ frameworks for greater site-specific flexibility, prompted by state concerns over rigid applications exacerbating livelihood disruptions in habitation-heavy areas, with a proposed inter-ministerial panel to refine criteria using localized data on ecological sensitivity and economic viability.[46] This evolution underscores a shift from prescriptive norms to evidence-based tailoring, though implementation remains contingent on verifiable site appraisals to avoid under- or over-regulation.[28]
Monitoring and Enforcement
Monitoring of Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India is primarily conducted through site-specific Monitoring Committees established upon notification of each ESZ by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC).[6] These committees, limited to no more than ten members, typically include representatives from the MoEFCC, Central Pollution Control Board, state forest department or special secretary, wildlife warden, district collector or nominee, a local non-governmental organization, a local resident, and a scientist.[47] Their core duties encompass scrutinizing proposed projects and activities within the ESZ, assessing compliance with notification provisions and zonal master plans, regulating traffic to minimize ecological disruption, and recommending actions against non-compliance to higher authorities.[48][49][50]Enforcement relies on coordination among state forest departments, pollution control boards, and local administrations, empowered under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, and Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, to address violations such as unauthorized construction, mining, or polluting activities prohibited in ESZs.[51] Violations trigger mechanisms including issuance of notices, registration of criminal cases, operational closures, fines up to ₹1 lakh or imprisonment up to five years (extendable for continued offenses), and potential adjudication by the National Green Tribunal (NGT).[52][53] For instance, in the Yeoor ESZ near Mumbai, enforcement actions in July 2025 included notices to 188 individuals and cases against 18 for prohibited firecracker use, demonstrating localized application by forest officials.[53]Despite these frameworks, enforcement faces systemic challenges, including understaffed Monitoring Committees that convene irregularly, inadequate inter-departmental coordination between forest, revenue, and panchayat bodies, and limited on-ground surveillance capacity, leading to persistent encroachments and unregulated activities in many ESZs.[32] Judicial interventions, such as Supreme Court mandates for compliance reporting, have occasionally bolstered oversight, but state-level implementation remains inconsistent as of 2025.[54]
Judicial Interventions
Key Supreme Court Rulings
In Goa Foundation v. Union of India (decided April 21, 2014), the Supreme Court directed the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) to process and notify eco-sensitive zones (ESZs) around six protected areas in Goa, including Cotigao Wildlife Sanctuary, Bhagwan Mahaveer Wildlife Sanctuary, Mollem National Park, Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary, Dr. Salim Ali Bird Sanctuary, and Mhadei Wildlife Sanctuary, emphasizing their role in protecting ecologically fragile zones from unregulated development.[55] The Court underscored that ESZ notifications must follow due process, including public consultation, while prohibiting activities detrimental to conservation objectives until finalized.[56]A landmark directive came on June 3, 2022, in the ongoing T.N. Godavarman Thirumulpad v. Union of India (W.P.(C) No. 202/1995), where a three-judge bench mandated a minimum 1 km ESZ around every national park and wildlife sanctuary across India to serve as a "shock absorber" against external pressures like urbanization and pollution. The order prohibited new permanent structures, expansion of existing non-forestry uses, and commercial activities such as mining within these zones without prior approval from the MoEFCC or State Boards, aiming to enforce the 2011 ESZ guidelines more stringently and halt pending projects until compliance. This ruling addressed delays in ESZ notifications, noting that only about 20% of protected areas had formalized zones by then, and directed the Central Empowered Committee to oversee implementation.[57]On April 26, 2023, the Supreme Court modified the 2022 order in the same Godavarman litigation, recognizing that a uniform 1 km radius was "impossible to implement" due to variations in topography, habitation density, and ecological needs across sites.[58] It clarified that ESZ extents should align with case-specific assessments co-terminus with notifications under the 2011 framework, rather than a blanket mandate, while upholding regulated prohibitions on activities like large-scale construction but permitting ongoing uses and essential infrastructure with safeguards.[58] The bench stressed scientific appraisals by expert committees, including satellite imagery and field surveys, to balance conservation with legitimate rights of residents in pre-existing settlements.[59] This adjustment responded to applications from the Union government and states highlighting practical disruptions, such as in densely populated areas near sanctuaries.[58]
2022-2023 Mandates and Reversals
On June 3, 2022, the Supreme Court of India, in a suo motu case concerning the preservation of protected forests, mandated the establishment of eco-sensitive zones (ESZs) extending at least 1 kilometer around all national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, and other protected areas to function as a "shock absorber" against developmental pressures and ecological degradation.[60][61] The court directed state governments to notify these zones within six months, prohibited new permanent structures or commercial activities within them pending notification, and required the Centre to finalize guidelines for activities in ESZs, emphasizing empirical assessment of ecological vulnerability over uniform application. This order stemmed from petitions highlighting inadequate buffering in many areas, where only about 20% of protected sites had notified ESZs prior to the ruling.[62]The 2022 mandate faced implementation challenges, including overlaps with existing settlements, agricultural lands, and infrastructure in densely populated regions, prompting applications for modification from the Union government and several states like Maharashtra, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu.[63] On April 27, 2023, the Supreme Court modified paragraphs 56.1 and 56.5 of its earlier judgment, exempting pre-notified ESZs from the 1 km minimum requirement and allowing states to delineate zones based on site-specific ecological criteria, such as topography, wildlife corridors, and human-wildlife conflict data, rather than a rigid buffer.[59][62] The court clarified that ESZs should not displace communities but regulate activities through graded restrictions, directing the Centre to process state proposals expeditiously while prioritizing conservation evidence over blanket prohibitions.This reversal balanced the initial conservation imperative with practical governance realities, as uniform 1 km zones would have impacted over 2.5 lakh square kilometers—roughly 7.5% of India's land area—potentially affecting millions in rural economies without proportional biodiversity gains in low-sensitivity terrains.[64] The modified order retained prohibitions on ecologically damaging activities but permitted states to seek exemptions for critical infrastructure via scientific justification, underscoring that ESZ delineation must derive from verifiable ecological mapping rather than judicial fiat alone.[63] By late 2023, several states had resubmitted proposals under the revised framework, though full compliance lagged due to ongoing assessments.[60]
2024-2025 Developments
In July 2025, the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife recommended a comprehensive review of the 2011 guidelines for declaring Eco-Sensitive Zones, advocating for a more flexible, site-specific approach to buffer zone delineation around protected areas.[28] This initiative responds to state-level concerns that rigid minimum widths, such as the one-kilometer buffer mandated in prior Supreme Court orders, impose undue restrictions on infrastructure and development without adequately accounting for varying ecological and socio-economic contexts.[65] The review aims to balance conservation with practical implementation, potentially allowing adjustments based on empirical assessments of threat levels and habitat integrity.[66]The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change issued its sixth draft notification in August 2024 for designating approximately 56,825 square kilometers of the Western Ghats as an Ecologically Sensitive Area, spanning Gujarat, Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala, and Tamil Nadu.[67] This proposal prohibits activities including mining, new thermal power plants, and large-scale industries, while regulating others like hydropower projects, to mitigate ecological degradation following events such as the 2024 Wayanad landslides.[68] Public objections closed on September 30, 2024, amid demands from states like Goa to exclude certain villages from the zoning to preserve local livelihoods.[69]Several ESZ notifications and amendments were finalized in 2024, contributing to a cumulative total of 345 notifications covering 485 protected areas by August.[44] Notable actions included amendments to the ESZ around Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary on July 11, 2024, and Nugu Wildlife Sanctuary on July 30, 2024, refining boundaries and permissible activities based on state proposals.[70][17] In May 2025, the Madras High Court ruled that unauthorized constructions within ESZs violate environmental safeguards, reinforcing enforcement against encroachments in ecologically fragile buffers.[71] These steps reflect ongoing efforts to expand coverage while addressing implementation challenges through targeted revisions.
Impacts and Effectiveness
Biodiversity Protection Outcomes
Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India serve as buffer areas around protected sites, including national parks and sanctuaries, with the primary objective of safeguarding biodiversity by regulating potentially disruptive activities such as mining, large-scale construction, and deforestation. These zones, mandated under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, and guided by 2011 Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) guidelines, aim to minimize habitat fragmentation, reduce human-wildlife conflicts, and preserve ecological corridors essential for species migration and gene flow.[72] As of March 2025, ESZs have been notified for 573 protected areas (443 finalized, 131 in draft), encompassing diverse ecosystems from the Western Ghats to Himalayan reserves, thereby extending conservation influence beyond core protected zones.[6]While ESZs theoretically enhance biodiversity resilience by curbing edge effects—such as invasive species ingress and soil erosion—quantifiable outcomes remain under-documented in peer-reviewed literature. Policy evaluations indicate that these zones contribute to maintaining ecological integrity through restrictions on non-sustainable land use, potentially lowering deforestation rates and promoting habitat connectivity in proximity to protected areas. For instance, in regions like the Western Ghats, ESZ delineations have been linked to efforts preserving endemic flora and fauna, including over 4,000 flowering plant species and threatened vertebrates, by limiting developmental pressures identified in the 2011 Gadgil Committee report.[73] However, no large-scale empirical studies attribute specific species population recoveries, such as increases in tiger (Panthera tigris) or elephant (Elephas maximus) numbers, directly to ESZ implementation, as broader protected area networks and anti-poaching measures confound causal attribution.[6]Challenges to realizing biodiversity gains include inconsistent enforcement, interstate boundary disputes, and delays in site-specific notifications, which can undermine protective efficacy. A 2022 Supreme Court directive mandating 1-km ESZs around all protected areas sought to standardize coverage, yet subsequent compliancedata shows variable adoption, with some zones failing to fully deter illegal activities like encroachment. Independent assessments highlight that while ESZs buffer against external threats, their success hinges on integrated monitoring; for example, reduced habitat isolation has been observed in notified zones around tiger reserves, supporting corridor functions, but without baseline-post-notification metrics, long-term impacts on alpha and beta diversity metrics remain speculative. Overall, ESZs represent a precautionary approach to biodiversity stewardship, with preliminary indications of threat mitigation, though rigorous, longitudinal studies are needed to validate conservation returns.[6][74]
Economic and Livelihood Effects
The declaration of Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India imposes restrictions on activities such as commercial mining, stone quarrying, large-scale industries, and certain tourism developments, which can constrain economic activities in resource-dependent regions.[11][51] These prohibitions, intended to mitigate ecological degradation, have raised concerns among states about hindering sectors like mining and infrastructure, potentially leading to reduced industrial output and investment in affected areas.[12] For instance, in the Western Ghats, ESZ notifications have sparked protests in Kerala over limitations on quarrying and construction, which supporters argue threaten short-term economic growth reliant on extractive industries.[27][75]Local livelihoods, particularly among forest-fringe communities dependent on non-timber forest products, small-scale agriculture, and informal resource extraction, face disruptions from ESZ regulations that limit access to traditional resources.[22] Empirical analysis of eco-development programs within protected areas—often integrated into ESZ frameworks—indicates a shift in labor markets, with a 6 percentage point reduction in year-round employment and an increase in seasonal non-farm work, reflecting transitions away from stable agrarian or extractive jobs toward less predictable alternatives.[76] In regions like the Western Ghats, such changes exacerbate vulnerabilities for tribal and rural populations, where restrictions amplify human-wildlife conflicts without commensurate compensation or relocation support.[6]On the positive side, ESZs encourage eco-tourism and sustainable agriculture, potentially generating alternative income streams through regulated homestays, organic farming, and biodiversity-based enterprises.[23] Government guidelines permit these activities with safeguards, aiming to enhance community resilience via programs addressing wildlife conflicts and resource management.[6] However, evidence on net livelihood gains remains limited, with studies noting that while non-farm employment rises, overall employment stability declines, underscoring the trade-offs between ecological preservation and immediate economic needs in ecologically fragile but economically marginal areas.[76] States have advocated for site-specific relaxations to balance these effects, highlighting ongoing tensions between uniform ESZ mandates and diverse regional economies.[11]
Empirical Evidence on Success
Empirical assessments of Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) in India reveal limited quantitative data on their overall effectiveness in enhancing biodiversity or curbing environmental degradation, with most evaluations relying on policy analyses rather than longitudinal studies. A 2024 review highlights theoretical benefits, such as reduced deforestation and habitat fragmentation through regulated activities, but lacks site-specific metrics to substantiate causal impacts across notified zones.[73] Government guidelines emphasize ESZs as buffers for protected areas, yet the absence of mandatory, standardized monitoring frameworks hinders robust evaluation, as noted in recommendations for revising the ESZ model under the Environment Protection Act, 1986.[6]Site-specific case studies provide sporadic indications of localized success. In Asola Bhatti Wildlife Sanctuary, ESZ notification following a 2011 Supreme Court directive restricted human encroachments, contributing to ecological restoration efforts that increased recorded bird species from approximately 80 in the early 2000s to over 250 by 2020, alongside reforestation of degraded lands. Similarly, eco-development initiatives in Western Ghats protected areas, integrated with ESZ-like buffers, have shown modest gains in labor alternatives for local communities, potentially reducing poaching pressures and supporting protected area management effectiveness, though these outcomes stem more from complementary programs than ESZ regulations alone.[76] However, such examples are not representative, as broader data from the India State of Forest Report indicates persistent forest cover declines in ESZ-designated regions like the Western Ghats, with a net loss of 1.4% in some hill forests between 2019 and 2021, attributed to inadequate enforcement and ongoing plantations displacing natural ecosystems.[77]Challenges in enforcement and uniform application undermine potential successes, with only 347 final ESZ notifications issued by 2024 despite over 1,000 protected areas requiring buffers.[28] Peer-reviewed analyses stress the need for adaptive, evidence-based zoning over blanket 1-km mandates, as rigid policies have correlated with increased human-wildlife conflicts in poorly monitored zones without corresponding biodiversity gains.[78] Overall, while ESZs theoretically advance conservation by limiting extractive activities, empirical verification of net positive outcomes remains inconclusive, pending enhanced monitoring and site-tailored implementations.
Controversies and Criticisms
Protests and Local Opposition
Local communities in regions proposed for Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) have mounted protests primarily due to apprehensions that regulatory restrictions would curtail agricultural practices, residential construction, mining operations, and other livelihood-dependent activities. In Kerala, farmers in high-range districts such as Idukki initiated widespread demonstrations in late 2022 against ESZ demarcations around protected areas, arguing that potential bans on activities like quarrying and plantation expansion would render farming untenable and displace longstanding land uses.[79] These actions followed the Supreme Court's February 2022 directive mandating 1 km ESZs around national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, which locals viewed as an overreach infringing on property rights without adequate consultation.[80]In Gujarat's Gir Protected Area, notifications proposing ESZs encompassing villages in Gir-Somnath, Junagadh, and Amreli districts triggered protests in October 2024, with residents blocking roads and submitting memoranda to authorities. Opponents, including pastoralists and small landowners, contended that prohibitions on new constructions and expansions would hinder housing for growing families and impede economic development in areas already bearing the brunt of wildlife conservation burdens.[81] Similar resistance emerged in Valparai, Tamil Nadu, where businesses enforced a complete shutdown on January 7, 2025, to oppose a draft ESZ notification around Anamalai Tiger Reserve, fearing limits on tourism infrastructure and commercial operations critical to the local economy.[82]Protests have also surfaced in Goa, where in September 2025, locals gathered to challenge ESZ proposals, alleging misinformation by political figures and emphasizing threats to traditional land uses amid rapid urbanization pressures.[83] Across these cases, opposition often highlights a perceived lack of empirical assessment of ESZ impacts on human settlements, with communities advocating for exemptions or scaled-back boundaries to balance conservation with verifiable socioeconomic needs, though environmental advocates counter that such zones prevent unregulated development from exacerbating habitat fragmentation.[84]
Development Restrictions
Development restrictions in Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) primarily prohibit activities deemed incompatible with ecological preservation, such as mining, establishment of large-scale industries, sawmills, and coke manufacturing units, while regulating others like commercialforestry, tourism beyond eco-tourism limits, and effluent discharge into water bodies. These prohibitions, outlined in notifications issued by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986, extend across notified ESZ boundaries, which often span 10 km or more around protected areas, effectively curtailing extractive and industrial operations to prevent habitat fragmentation and pollution. For instance, mining activities are explicitly banned within ESZs, regardless of whether the zone's extent exceeds the initial 1 km buffer mandated by the Supreme Court in 2022, leading to the suspension of leases and projects in regions like the Western Ghats and Gir National Park vicinity.[51][85]Critics, including state governments and industry representatives, contend that these blanket restrictions impose undue economic burdens by halting infrastructure development and livelihood-dependent activities, such as small-scale mining that supports local employment in rural economies. The Supreme Court's June 3, 2022, order, which imposed a complete ban on new permanent structures within 1 km ESZs, exemplified this tension, as it threatened essential projects like roads, bridges, and housing for millions residing in these zones, prompting accusations of overriding federalism and ignoring site-specific viability. Although the Court modified this in April 2023 to permit constructions for public utilities, schools, and hospitals subject to environmental safeguards and state approvals, ongoing prohibitions on mining and industry have persisted, stalling investments estimated to affect sectors contributing significantly to state GDPs in mineral-rich areas.[86][87][14]By July 2025, amid state-level pushback highlighting development hurdles—such as delayed renewable energy projects and urban expansion—the central government initiated a review of ESZ guidelines to introduce flexibility, including site-specific zoning plans that could allow regulated activities under stricter monitoring. Industry analyses argue that rigid enforcement without empirical assessment of ecological risks versus socioeconomic costs exacerbates regional disparities, as seen in protests over halted mining in Uttarakhand and Gujarat, where alternatives like compensatory afforestation have proven insufficient to offset job losses numbering in the thousands. These restrictions, while aimed at causal prevention of biodiversity decline, have fueled debates on policy calibration, with evidence from affected locales indicating minimal verifiable gains in habitat recovery relative to foregone development opportunities.[11][12][88]
Policy Overreach Debates
Critics argue that the Supreme Court's June 3, 2022, directive mandating a minimum 1 km eco-sensitive zone (ESZ) around all national parks and wildlife sanctuaries represents judicial overreach, as it imposed a uniform buffer without case-specific scientific assessment of topography, wildlife corridors, or interstate boundaries.[89][87] Experts contend this approach disregards empirical variations, such as urban proximity or flat terrains where a fixed distance may not enhance conservation while broadly restricting activities like agriculture and housing.[89] The Court later modified the order on April 28, 2023, acknowledging implementation challenges, including exemptions for pre-existing structures and state-specific adjustments, yet the initial blanket mandate fueled accusations of bypassing executive and legislative processes.[87][90]State governments have raised concerns over central overreach in ESZ notifications by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), viewing them as encroachments on federal autonomy in a concurrent subject like environment. For instance, Kerala passed a resolution in 2022 urging exclusion of human habitations and farmlands from ESZs, arguing that central impositions ignore local socio-economic realities and could displace communities without adequate compensation.[91]Karnataka opposed the 2022 draft notification for Western Ghats ESAs, citing threats to development projects and agricultural lands spanning millions of hectares.[92]Tamil Nadu leaders, including O. Panneerselvam, called for withdrawal of the SC's ESZ order in August 2022, highlighting its potential to halt infrastructure in populated buffer areas.[93] By July 2025, amid widespread state pushback, the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife recommended reviewing ESZ guidelines for greater flexibility, reflecting ongoing tensions between national conservation mandates and state-level governance.[11]Local opposition frames ESZ expansions as policy overreach that prioritizes "fortress conservation" over community rights, often leading to protests without verifiable biodiversity gains. In Gujarat's Gir forest, a 2024 draft ESZ of 2,061 sq km sparked demonstrations by villagers fearing loss of grazing and farming rights, echoing 2016 protests halted by court intervention.[84][94] Kerala's 2023 protests against ESZ notifications highlighted restrictions on mining and construction in high-density areas, with critics noting that such zones—covering up to 20% of notified land in some cases—impose bans without evidence of causal links to improved ecological outcomes.[27] Odisha's 2025 attempt to revisit ESZ norms for tourism in Satkosia Tiger Reserve was abandoned after scrutiny, underscoring how rigid policies can conflict with empirical needs for balanced land use.[95] These debates emphasize that while ESZs aim to mitigate edge effects, overbroad application risks alienating stakeholders and undermining long-term conservation through unproven, top-down restrictions.[96]