CAG pulls up MoEF over green schemes
The Comptroller of Auditor General (CAG) on Friday came down heavily on the ministry of environment and forest for lapses in implementation of its green schemes whether it was for afforestation, biodiversity, pollution control or creating awareness.
Noting that there were not only loopholes in the money allotment process but also poor implementation, the CAG recommended 37 specific corrective measures in its report tabled in Parliament.
“Protection and conservation of the environment is becoming important, especially in light of observed climate change,” deputy CAG Rekha Gupta said on the need for preparing the report, the first audit report on the ministry presenting a “holistic” view of its working.
The CAG took serious note of the fact that there was a huge pendency of the utilisation certificates (totalling 7,196), amounting to a staggering `596.79 crores outstanding till March 2010 indicating lack of monitoring and follow-up system.
In the last seven years till 2009, the National Afforestation and Eco-Development Board (NAEB) had released `47.3 crores to the agencies for implementing 647 afforestation schemes.
But only 3.57 per cent and 23 per cent of the total projects sanctioned to NGOs and state forest departments and agencies could be completed, it noted. The report did not rule out the “possibility of fraud as many agencies did not come back to NAEB for release of further instalments.”
Moreover, more than 93 per cent of the projects did not achieve their targeted objectives, thereby seriously impacting the efforts to increase tree cover in the country, it said.
The CAG also pulled up the ministry’s National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) for failure to notify important regulations governing access to bio-diversity, transfer of results of research and Intellectual Property Rights even six years after its formation.
Moreover, the NBA which was set up for regulation, conservation and sustainable use of bio-resources in the country also did not take initiatives to identify endangered species and recommend guidelines for their conservation, it said.
For instance, “the list of endangered species was prepared for only seven out of 28 states,” the CAG said, adding that it had no information on grant of Intellectual Property Rights outside India. Poor implementation of ecocity programme initiated by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) in six cities was another area where the ministry received flak from the country’s top audit body.
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