Urban Sprawl – UPSC GS1

Facts:

  • Indian urban population expected to reach 600 million by 2031
  • Recent water-logging crises in Gurgaon and Bangalore
 
What is the new trend in this Urbanisation?
Population growth will not be in the core city. It will mainly be concentrated in semi urban or rural areas surrounding or adjacent to the core city.
 
What are the challenges posed by this kind of development?
This kind of urban sprawl poses many economic, ecological and institutional challenges.
  • These areas are often characterized by the absence of basic infrastructure and services like water, sanitation, electricity, roads and transportation.
  • With changes in land use, as seen in the commercialization of agricultural land, the ecosystem of the region is also threatened.
  • In the midst of such a transformation, the livelihoods of people in peri-urban areas will also become precarious.
 
Why state’s intervention is necessary?
New expansions are largely led by private developers. Hence, the state cannot afford to turn a blind eye to growth led by private developers in these areas as it only leads to the development of certain pockets like gated communities, with no attention paid to public infrastructure. The recent water-logging crises in Gurgaon and Bangalore demonstrate how untrammelled development without the provision of basic urban amenities like a proper drainage system can result in an urban dystopia.
Also, often the agricultural land in the urban periphery that is acquired for mega-projects from farmers at very cheap rates and then transferred to various business and commercial units, leaves landowners and cultivators out of the development process. They are then forced to relocate.
 
How should the state respond to this change?
  • State should plan for the future by identifying areas for growth and taking steps to ensure that these areas are first provided with basic urban infrastructure and services.
  • Alongside National Rurban Mission, which aims to develop 300 “rurban” growth clusters, the government should also develop peri-urban areas adjacent to India’s mega-cities which may not administratively come under an urban local body (ULB).
  • For responding to a phenomenon like peripheral urban growth, an institutional framework that provides for a metropolitan-level planning and governance mechanism is essential. But to ensure that these processes do not get overly centralized, it needs to be supplemented by appropriate mechanisms at the city and neighbourhood level.

 

 

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