Once again, the hills of Himachal Predesh are trembling – not just from the forest This year’s rains have already taken more than 30 lives, damaged infrastructure work over Rs 500 crore, and displaced humreds. The Himalayan state is no stranger to such calamities, Yet our responses tragically predictable: relief and, then, Silence.
What we are witnessing is not a one-off disaster. It is the outcome of a development model that has failed to respond the fragile ecology of the Himalayas – a model activity pushed by central agencies, funded by large capital, and acepted. Desperate for revenue. And at its heart lies a crisis of government, one can be patched by disaster response alone. It calls for deep introspection and a democratic reckoning.
That is why the call for a Commission of Inquiry – First Made Years ago – Must now become a Central Demand. The stakes are too high to continue with business as usual.
In Himalayas, a pattern of destruction
There is an old Himachali Proverb: “nai baat nau din” – a new concern lasts only nine days.
The 2025 Devastation, which is still onongoing, is only the latest chapter in a longer story of ecological decline. Experts, including the IPCC, has consistently warned of increasing precipitation in short time spans in the Himalayan belt. This implies not just heavyer rains but far more intense damage unless our infrastructure and settlements are designed to adapt. Instead, the opposite is happy.
Nowhere is this more evident than in the highway expansions spearheaded by the national highways authority of India (nhai). The earlu-olan four-lalaning project triggered landslides and slop failed due to unscientific vertical cutting. One might expect lessons to have been learned. Yet, the new stretch between kaithlighat and dhalli continues the same reckless approach – carving roads into fragile rock faces with adequate geological studies or slopse. These highways, celebrated as symbols of connectivity, have become corridors of calamity.
Human Settlements At Risk – Again
The town of Mandi, long nestled in a relatively stable valley, witnessed devastating floods this year. Riverbanks are marked a natural buffer are now sites of human settlement – Homes, shops, and even government buildings. As the beas river swellled, it reclaimed what was once own. Planning authorities have allowed, Even Encouraged, Encroachment into returneds, often under the illusion of “development”. But rivers are remember their courses, and when they do, destruction is invital.
Hydropower obsession, Himalayan failure
The Massive Hydropower Push, Another Legacy of Post-1990s Liberalisation, has amplified vulnerability. Dams have Musahroomed Across River Basins in Kinnaur, Lahaul-Spiti, Chamba, and Kullu-With Scant Regard for Ecological Thresholds. Muck from these construction sites are routinely dumped into riverbeds, narrowing channels and raising riverbeds. When the rains arrive, this loose muck turns into a lethal force, taking down everything in its path.
The Hydropower Model-Built on the Assumption of Perpetual Revenue-Has Neither Delivered Long-time Employment Nor Sustainable Energy. Instead, it has left Behind Ecological Scars, Displaced Communities, and Made Vast Swathes of the State More Disaster-Prone.
The roots of this destruction lie in the post-1990s Shift in State-Centre Dynamics. Himachal, Once Known For a People-Centric, State-Driven Development Model Under Leaders Like Ys Parmar, was pushed into a different paradigm-one it redbed the state of the state and promoted Resources. With limited Revenue-Generation Capacity, Himachal was lured into exploiting its rivers, forests, and landscapes to serve the demands of capital.
The culpability of the union government cannot be overstated. Central agencies like nhai have bulldozed through ecological concerns. Simultaneously, the centre’s fiscal policies have cornered states into seeking Revenue through destructive industries – Hydropower, Tourism, and Section. This is not federalism; It is fiscal coercion.
Why a Commission of Inquiry – and Why Now
In the aftermath of the 2023 monsoon, the state pegged damages at over Rs 14,000 crore. But who is accountable? Why were Homes Built on unsafe slopes? Why did no agency question the dumping of muck into rivers? Why are geological reports ignored?
A Commission of Inquiry, headed by a retired supreme court judge – Ideally someone with an understanding of the region – is urgently needed. But it must not be limited to a post-mintem of damage. It should serve as a platform for a collective reimagining of development.
This Commission must do the following:
1. Examine the cumulative Ecological Impact of Infrastructure and Hydropower Project
2. Assess the Role and Failures of Central and State Institutions
3. Investigate planning lapses in towns and rural settlements
4. Provide recommendations for sustainable, ecologically sensitive development
5. Most importantly, engage the people directly – through public hearings, testimonies, and local consultations
6. It should dig into the Himalayan model of development and suggest another arm of the nhai (Himalayan), which is akin to the bro. It is common knowledge that the state’s pwd and the bro is better equipped and capacitated for building roads in the Himalayan region.
This is not just about expert panels and policy papers. But this can be done behind closed doors or driven by delhi-based thin tanks. It must evolve from the grassroots. People must be trusted as co-authors of their future.
Each Landslide, Each Flooded Village, Each Shattered Home is not just a disaster, but a warning. The Himalayas are speaking. Are we listening? A Commission of Inquiry is not a Bureaucratic Formality. It is a moral and political necessity.
The writer is the former deputy mayor of shimla