>"Madhav Gadgil, India’s veteran ecologist and a foremost figure in
environmental causes, breathed his last at 11pm on January 7, 2026. He was
83 years old."

>"Gadgil was of the firm view that the central government often uses its
institutions to misinform citizens or suppress information that may trigger
resistance. On the Aravallis, he said the Centre used the Forest Survey of
India (FSI), Geological Survey of India (GOI) and Soil Survey of India
(SOI) to bring a definition that suited it the most."

>"He cited the example of his field study mapping the Nilgiris in the
1990s. A detailed measurement of the hills revealed that government
agencies reported lower ground levels that would suit development more than
conservation."

>"Gadgil referred to his last book and autobiography titled *A Walk Up The
Hill: Living With People And Nature* in 2023. Development, said Gadgil, is
often made binding on people. He added that conservation issues addressed
by state forest departments are not those that concern people on the
ground. But they enforce conservation as it suits them from the top."

>“'We have seen the Surajgarh mining case in the Gadchiroli district of
Maharashtra, which is a sacred site for Gond tribes. But these locals were
suppressed, violated and stripped of their democratic rights for mining,'
he [Gadgil] recalled."

-------------------
By: Himanshu Nitnaware
<https://www.downtoearth.org.in/author/himanshu-nitnaware>
Published in: *Down To Earth*
Date: January 8, 2026
Source:
https://www.downtoearth.org.in/environment/government-is-known-to-use-institutions-to-misinform-citizens-madhav-gadgil
Aravalli mining precedent will be used a blueprint for other parts of the
country, and its evidence will come forth, late veteran ecologist said
during his last conversation with Down To Earth

Madhav Gadgil, India’s veteran ecologist and a foremost figure in
environmental causes, breathed his last at 11pm on January 7, 2026. He was
83 years old.

*Down To Earth* (*DTE*) spoke to him on January 2 about his opinions
regarding the Aravalli issue and the Supreme Court order accepting the new
definition of the hills as recommended by the central government panel.

He was unwell and had suffered a fall, hurting his leg in the process. “I
am unable to read properly, but I can talk,” he said. But his commitment to
sharing his views on the environment remained strong. He took short breaks
between calls and asked *DTE* to call back again at intervals of 10 minutes
or four minutes and repeated each time, ‘do call me again’, before hanging
up.

Over a 40-minute conversation, he gave his views on the Aravallis and
experiences with governments over the decades.

The apex court stayed its decision regarding the hills on December 29, 2025.

Gadgil was of the firm view that the central government often uses its
institutions to misinform citizens or suppress information that may trigger
resistance. On the Aravallis, he said the Centre used the Forest Survey of
India (FSI), Geological Survey of India (GOI) and Soil Survey of India
(SOI) to bring a definition that suited it the most.

“Our (Gadgil and other researchers) studies from the field have often
differed from official government data. This difference has always been
deliberate, and we wondered where the problem might be. We found out that
such differences occurred where the results might be not acceptable to the
government,” Gadgil told *DTE*.

He cited the example of his field study mapping the Nilgiris in the 1990s.
A detailed measurement of the hills revealed that government agencies
reported lower ground levels that would suit development more than
conservation.

The veteran ecologist also spoke about the section of the Western Ghats in
Maharashtra. He noted that the FSI had often suppressed information on how
development in the region and extraction of resources would impact local
residents adversely.

Gadgil referred to his last book and autobiography titled *A Walk Up The
Hill: Living With People And Nature* in 2023. Development, said Gadgil, is
often made binding on people. He added that conservation issues addressed
by state forest departments are not those that concern people on the
ground. But they enforce conservation as it suits them from the top.

He asserted that development and conservation should always be by the
people and governments should adopt a bottom-to-top approach on
environmental conservation.

“The experiences of the people on the ground should be used in planning
conservation. We have seen such success through the Silent Valley Project
by MK Prasad which now remains a well-protected biodiversity-rich national
park,” he recalled.

Going back to the Aravallis, he warned that initiating mining on a wide
scale in the region would set a precedent for the government to implement
the same in other parts of the country.

“The government has surplus ways of justifying its actions, mainly the need
for resources and development,” he said, expressing disappointment that the
mining of rocks and its environmental devastation and impact has not been
reported properly in India.

“The Aravalli mining precedent will be used a blueprint for other parts of
the country, and its evidence will come forth. More mining areas will be
opened,” he observed.

Gadgil said that tribals and people dependent on forests would be impacted
the most. “We have seen the Surajgarh mining case in the Gadchiroli
district of Maharashtra, which is a sacred site for Gond tribes. But these
locals were suppressed, violated and stripped of their democratic rights
for mining,” he recalled.

He alleged that the state government also mixed data on districts to
identify Community Forest Rights areas with higher forest cover to deprive
tribals and forest dwellers of the rights. “The justification given then
was that the tribes had agreed and supported the mandate, which was not
true,” he had said.

The ecological rights of tribals should be left alone, said Gadgil.

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