What is the issue?
- The Centre does not know exactly how much property it owns.
- This has created various problems with the economy and the land use pattern of the urban areas.
What is the official status?
- The information provided by the Government Land Information System (GLIS) is incomplete.
- Various Central Ministries admit to owning only about 13,50,500 hectares of land.
- But disparate official sources suggest that the correct figure is several times more.
- Also a large proportion of government land lies unused.
- The Ministries of Railways and Defence, respectively, have 43,000 hectares and 32,780 hectares of land lying vacant.
- According to reports of the CAG, the 13 major port trusts have 14,728 hectares of land lying idle.
| Total Land holding claimed in the GLIS | Total Land Holding# | Surplus Land# | Encroached area# |
Railways | 2,92,960 | 4,23,000 | 43,000 | 2,240 |
Defence | 38,362 | 7,11,032.67 | 32,780 | 4,856.23 |
Port Trusts (13 Major) | | 31,238.15 | 14,566.83 | 161.18 |
Airport Authority of India (AAI) | | 55,037.25 | | 422.82 |
What is the problem of unused land?
- High Value - A large part of the unused land is high-value property in prime areas in major cities.
- Land hoarding by government agencies has created artificial scarcity.
- It is one of the main reasons for skyrocketing urban real estate prices.
- Middle and lower-income households find adequate housing unaffordable.
- High land prices also reduce competitiveness by increasing the cost of industrial and development projects.
- The allocation of unused land is rife with corruption.
- Urban planning - To maintain efficiency amidst increasing population and economic growth, the Floor space index (FSI) should also increase.
- However, most Indian cities defy these basic tenets of urban planning due to the large areas of unused or underutilised government land with an irresponsibly low FSI.
- The FSI in Shanghai is four times of that of Delhi and Mumbai.
- Economic growth - Solving the problem of wastage could generate employment and pull masses out of poverty.
- Another report by the CAG on SEZs shows that 53% of the total land acquired by the government for these zones remains unused.
What should be done?
- The need of the hour is a comprehensive inventory of land resources and usage patterns for all government branches.
- It should include information on the location of each property, its dimensions, the legal title, current and planned use, and any applicable land use restrictions.
- The government should also agree to disclose its land use and release of excess land, the use of which it cannot justify.
Quick Facts
Floor space index (FSI)
- Floor space index (FSI) is the total floor area built per square metre of land.
- If if a single-storey building occupies 50% of a plot, the FSI would be 1/2.
- If the building is expanded vertically to have four stories, the FSI will go up to two (4 times 1/2), as the effective floor area has quadrupled.
Source: The Hindu