Why Goa May Get a Tiger Reserve: CEC Report, Government Stand & Key Recommendations

Tiger Reserve

Tiger Reserve Latest News

  • The Supreme Court’s Central Empowered Committee (CEC) has advised the Goa government to create a tiger reserve in the State. 
  • It suggested doing this in a phased manner, indicating a gradual approach to setting up the reserve.

Why the CEC Recommended a Tiger Reserve in Goa

  • The CEC’s recommendation is rooted in earlier judicial and conservation actions. 
  • In July 2023, the Bombay High Court directed the Goa government to declare five protected areas as a tiger reserve within three months.
  • These five protected areas were:
    • Mhadei Wildlife Sanctuary, 
    • Bhagwan Mahavir Wildlife Sanctuary, 
    • Bhagwan Mahavir National Park, 
    • Netravali Wildlife Sanctuary, and 
    • Cotigao Wildlife Sanctuary.
  • The order followed a petition by the Goa Foundation after a tigress and her three cubs were allegedly poisoned in the Mhadei Sanctuary in 2020. 
  • The Court also asked the State to prepare a Tiger Conservation Plan and settle the rights of Scheduled Tribes and forest dwellers. 
  • Notably, the National Tiger Conservation Authority had already recommended these areas for tiger reserve status in 2016.

How the Goa Government Responded to the Tiger Reserve Order

  • The Goa government challenged the High Court’s directive by filing a Special Leave Petition in the Supreme Court, claiming that declaring the areas as a tiger reserve would affect nearly one lakh people. 
    • However, its own affidavit later revealed a much smaller number — roughly 1,274 households across 33 villages, amounting to 5,000–6,000 people.
  • The State also argued that Goa had no “resident” tigers and that those seen in its forests were merely “transient.” 
    • This stance contradicted its 2018 submission before the Mhadei Water Disputes Tribunal, where it had asserted evidence of a resident tiger population.
    • It had, then, described Goa’s forests as part of a contiguous tiger landscape linked to Karnataka’s Kali Tiger Reserve and Bhimgad Wildlife Sanctuary.
  • Due to these conflicting claims, the Supreme Court asked the Central Empowered Committee (CEC) to conduct a site visit and examine the matter. 

CEC Recommendation for Goa’s Tiger Reserve

  • The CEC’s report acknowledged fears among local residents about displacement and stressed that the Goa government must reassure affected communities.
  • It proposed creating the tiger reserve in phases, beginning with areas that are ecologically sensitive, least inhabited, and directly connected to Karnataka’s Kali Tiger Reserve, which has a permanent tiger presence.

Core Zone (Phase 1)

  • Include protected areas contiguous with Kali’s core area
  • Netravali Wildlife Sanctuary — 50 households
  • Cotigao Wildlife Sanctuary — 41 households
  • Total core area recommended: 296.7 sq km

Buffer Zone (Phase 1)

  • Include areas adjoining the buffer zone of Kali Tiger Reserve with minimal habitation
  • Northern Bhagwan Mahavir Wildlife Sanctuary — 9 households
  • Bhagwan Mahavir National Park — 2 households
  • The CEC said this phased approach would minimise community disturbance while strengthening landscape connectivity and ecological functionality across the Goa–Karnataka tiger habitat network.

Why the Tiger Reserve Designation Matters

  • Declaring an area a tiger reserve brings in greater funding for conservation, research, and habitat management compared to existing wildlife sanctuaries. 
  • It also requires dividing the landscape into core and buffer zones.
    • Core zones must remain inviolate, meaning human presence is discouraged. Residents cannot be forced out, but they may be offered incentives to voluntarily relocate.
    • Buffer zones allow regulated human activities and do not need to be free of habitation.
  • This zoning helps strengthen tiger protection while balancing community interests.

How a Tiger Reserve Is Declared in India

  • To create a tiger reserve, the state government first identifies a suitable area and submits a detailed proposal to the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA). 
  • The NTCA evaluates the site’s ecological suitability and tiger habitat potential, then forwards its recommendation to the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC).
  • Following this, the state issues a preliminary notification, invites and addresses objections, and finally issues a formal notification under Section 38V of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, officially designating the area as a tiger reserve.

Source: TH  |TOI | NTCA

Tiger Reserve FAQs

Q1: Why did the CEC recommend a tiger reserve in Goa?

Ans: The CEC acted on court directives and ecological assessments showing Goa’s protected forests connect with Karnataka’s tiger habitats and require enhanced protection after poaching incidents.

Q2: What triggered the legal push for a tiger reserve?

Ans: A 2023 Bombay High Court order, based on a petition after tiger poisoning deaths in 2020, required notification of five sanctuaries as a tiger reserve.

Q3: How did the Goa government respond to the proposal?

Ans: Goa opposed the order, citing large population impact, but later admitted only 1,274 households would be affected and claimed tigers were transient, contradicting earlier claims.

Q4: What did the CEC recommend for the reserve’s structure?

Ans: The CEC proposed a phased creation: core areas contiguous with Karnataka’s Kali Tiger Reserve first, followed by buffer zones with minimal human habitation to reduce community disruption.

Q5: Why does tiger reserve status matter for Goa?

Ans: Tiger reserve designation brings more conservation funding, stronger legal protection, and core-buffer zoning while balancing forest preservation with community rights and regulated human activity.

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