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“Illegal sand mining has emerged as a major threat to river ecosystems in India”. Analyze the factors driving illegal sand mining and its implications for sustainable river management.

Kartavya Desk Staff

Topic: Changes in critical geographical features (including water-bodies and ice-caps)

Topic: Changes in critical geographical features (including water-bodies and ice-caps)

Q2. “Illegal sand mining has emerged as a major threat to river ecosystems in India”. Analyze the factors driving illegal sand mining and its implications for sustainable river management. (15 M)

Difficulty Level: Medium

Reference: TH

Why the question: Villagers join hands against illegal sand mining along Assam-Meghalaya border. Key Demand of the question: Analyze the drivers behind illegal sand mining. Examine its implications for river ecosystems and sustainable management. Propose solutions to address the issue. Structure of the Answer: Introduction: Define illegal sand mining briefly, linking it to the environmental degradation of river systems in India. Body: Factors Driving Illegal Sand Mining: Suggest points such as high demand for sand in construction, weak regulation, corruption, and socio-economic dependence in affected regions. Implications for Sustainable River Management: Suggest points covering riverbed degradation, biodiversity loss, disruption of natural water flow, and increased vulnerability to floods and erosion. Solutions: Suggest measures like stronger regulatory enforcement, technological monitoring (e.g., satellite imagery), promoting alternatives (manufactured sand), and involving local communities in sustainable management efforts. Conclusion: Emphasize the urgent need for a balanced approach that addresses both development needs and environmental sustainability, calling for stricter enforcement and long-term policy measures for river conservation.

Why the question: Villagers join hands against illegal sand mining along Assam-Meghalaya border.

Key Demand of the question:

Analyze the drivers behind illegal sand mining. Examine its implications for river ecosystems and sustainable management. Propose solutions to address the issue.

Structure of the Answer:

Introduction:

Define illegal sand mining briefly, linking it to the environmental degradation of river systems in India.

Factors Driving Illegal Sand Mining: Suggest points such as high demand for sand in construction, weak regulation, corruption, and socio-economic dependence in affected regions.

Implications for Sustainable River Management: Suggest points covering riverbed degradation, biodiversity loss, disruption of natural water flow, and increased vulnerability to floods and erosion.

Solutions: Suggest measures like stronger regulatory enforcement, technological monitoring (e.g., satellite imagery), promoting alternatives (manufactured sand), and involving local communities in sustainable management efforts.

Conclusion:

Emphasize the urgent need for a balanced approach that addresses both development needs and environmental sustainability, calling for stricter enforcement and long-term policy measures for river conservation.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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