...
...
Next Story

Odisha to build India’s first resettlement colony for climate change victims

The model colony for the displaced villagers of Satabhaya would be built at Bagapatia in Kendrapara district at a cost of Rs. 22.5 crore in the first phase.

Updated on: Apr 30, 2023 08:32 PM IST
By
Prefer HTon Google
Advertisement

The Odisha government is planning to build India’s first resettlement colony for people affected by climate change, officials from the chief minister’s office (CMO) said on Sunday.

(HT Photo)
(HT Photo)

A senior official at the CMO said the model colony for the displaced villagers of Satabhaya would be built at Bagapatia in Kendrapara district at a cost of Rs. 22.5 crore in the first phase, five years after 530 families from a group of villages had to leave their homes after the rising sea devoured their homes.

“The sanctioned funds would be utilised for the construction of houses, drinking water, electricity connection, road and other facilities for the displaced people,” said the official who did not wish to be named.

Also Read: Four children killed, one injured in lightning strike in Jharkhand’s Sahibganj

He added that the state government is planning to provide agricultural land to the Satabhaya villagers who have lost their livelihood due to the coastal erosion.

‘Sata-bhaya’ is a group of seven villages that existed along the Kendrapara coast several decades ago, but went under the sea one by one due to coastal erosion.

In the 1960s, the villagers moved inland to create more new villages and named one of them Satbhaya in memory of the lost seven villages, however, the approaching sea continued to gobble up the villages and in 2011, Kanhupur was the last village to disappear.

Also Read: Addressing vulnerabilities in the supply chain of critical minerals

Before the last village went under seawater, the state government had in 2008 started the process of relocating the people of the Satabhaya gram panchayat and shifted 571 families to the resettlement colony at Bagapatia, around 12 kilometres away, by 2018. However, the living conditions of the relocated families were no better due to the lack of basic amenities.

Satabhaya, adjacent to the Paradeep beach, suffered erosion due to the destruction of the natural sea barrier of dense mangrove forest following the construction of Paradip port in 1966.

Fortification of the Paradip area with stone walls to prevent sea erosion, generated sea waves that eroded the Satabhaya beach up north. According to the National Centre for Coastal Research, Odisha lost 28% of its 485-km-long coastline between 1999 and 2016 to seawater intrusion.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Debabrata Mohanty

Debabrata Mohanty is a senior assistant editor of Hindustan Times who works as state correspondent from Odisha covering the state's politics, governance, public policy, natural disasters, environment and its society for close to three decades. With his long years of reporting from the state capital of Bhubaneswar, Mohanty has been known as one of the most experienced and credible journalists covering Odisha for the national English dailies. His reporting combines on-ground detail with deep institutional knowledge detailing the state's changing politics, governance issues, administrative reforms and the functioning of its public institutions. He has regularly reported on issues ranging from legislative developments and public policy implementation. Politics is his core areas of expertise as he closely tracks Odisha's political landscape, including the rise and transformation of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the Biju Janata Dal (BJD), the two principal political parties in Odisha. His long association with the state's political establishment enables him to write on contemporary developments in a larger political context. Mohanty takes a deep interest in writing human interest stories, environmental issues and documenting the impact of cyclones, floods, heatwaves, and other climate-related events in one of the most disaster-prone states. His coverage extends to public health, governance reforms and stories on accountability of government institutions. Before joining Hindustan Times, Mohanty worked with The Indian Express, Mail Today, and The Telegraph, where he covered at least six general elections and as many assembly elections. In 2007, he was selected for the prestigious Chevening Young Indian Print Journalist Programme at the University of Lincoln, United Kingdom, where he received advanced training in print journalism. In 2009 he won the Press Institute of India-International Committee of Red Cross award on conflict reporting for his on-ground reportage of 2008 Kandhamal riots.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe