Across the country, a series of citizen-led protests has brought renewed attention to a familiar question: where should India draw the line between development and conservation?
From farmers hugging trees in Karnataka to residents rallying to save Mumbai’s mangroves and football grounds, recent demonstrations highlight a growing demand for development that is environmentally sustainable and socially inclusive. While governments argue that these projects promise jobs, improved infrastructure and economic growth, protesters say the long-term ecological and cultural costs are too high.
Karnataka: Farmers Hug Trees
One of the most striking protests unfolded near Bidadi, on Bengaluru’s outskirts, where farmers launched an Appiko (tree-hugging) movement against the proposed Greater Bengaluru Integrated Township (GBIT), popularly referred to as the Bidadi AI City project.
The Karnataka government has projected the ₹18,000-crore township as a futuristic urban hub with AI-powered industries, housing and commercial infrastructure. However, local farmers fear the acquisition of fertile agricultural land and the loss of thousands of trees and green spaces.
Borrowing inspiration from Karnataka’s historic Appiko movement of the 1980s—which itself drew from the Chipko movement—protesters embraced trees while demanding that the government reconsider the project. Farmers argue that the proposed township threatens not only biodiversity but also the livelihoods of families dependent on agriculture for generations.
The protests have also drawn political attention, with opposition leaders backing farmers and calling for wider consultations before land acquisition proceeds.
Tamil Nadu: Mekedatu Dam
In neighbouring Tamil Nadu, farmers have once again intensified protests against Karnataka’s proposed Mekedatu balancing reservoir across the Cauvery River.
Farmer organisations contend that the project could reduce water availability downstream, posing a serious threat to irrigation in the Cauvery delta—often referred to as Tamil Nadu’s rice bowl. Environmental concerns have also been raised over the potential submergence of forest land and impacts on wildlife habitats in the ecologically sensitive Cauvery basin.
In recent weeks, farmer representatives renewed demonstrations, urging the Union government not to grant final approval to the project. For many protesters, the issue extends beyond an inter-state water dispute to one of environmental justice and long-term food security, with fears that changing river flows could adversely affect agriculture and fragile ecosystems.
Mumbai: Citizens Rally To Save Mangroves
Hundreds of kilometres away in Mumbai, another environmental battle is unfolding along the city’s coastline.
Citizens, environmental groups and activists have continued protesting against the proposed felling of nearly 45,000 mangrove trees for infrastructure development associated with the Coastal Road project and related urban expansion. Protesters argue that mangroves are far more than patches of greenery—they serve as natural flood barriers, absorb carbon, protect biodiversity and shield Mumbai from increasingly frequent climate-related disasters.
Environmentalists warn that large-scale destruction of mangrove ecosystems could leave the city more vulnerable to flooding and coastal erosion, especially as extreme rainfall events become more common due to climate change.
Demonstrators have urged authorities to explore alternatives that minimise ecological damage while pursuing urban infrastructure goals, arguing that development should strengthen, rather than weaken, cities’ natural defences.
Mumbai’s mangroves are suffocating, and we’re cutting them down at the same time.
— yash saghal (@YSaghal) May 4, 2026
These aerial roots are meant to stay exposed so the trees can breathe. But here they’re buried under plastic and city waste, choked, dying. When these roots die, the mangroves die. And when… pic.twitter.com/Ofqq6Pq7c8
Football Community Fights
Mumbai has also witnessed a different kind of conservation movement—one centred on sporting heritage.
Footballers, coaches, former players and local residents recently protested the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation’s proposal to redesignate the Neville D’Souza Ground in Bandra as an exhibition and convention centre.
Named after India’s first Olympic football hat-trick scorer, Neville D’Souza, the ground has long served as an important training venue for aspiring footballers and community sporting events. Protesters argue that replacing it with commercial infrastructure would erase an irreplaceable public sporting space and diminish the city’s football culture.
For many participants, the issue represents more than saving a playground. They see it as protecting a shared cultural landmark that has nurtured generations of athletes and strengthened community bonds.
Development With Accountability
Although these protests involve different landscapes—from forests and rivers to wetlands and sports grounds—they reflect a common concern.
Communities are not necessarily opposing development itself. Rather, they are questioning projects that they believe proceed without adequate environmental assessments, meaningful public consultation or consideration of long-term ecological consequences.
India’s rapid urbanisation and infrastructure expansion have become central to economic planning. Yet these movements suggest that citizens increasingly expect governments to balance growth with environmental sustainability, climate resilience and the protection of public spaces and cultural heritage.
As climate risks intensify and natural ecosystems become increasingly valuable, these local protests are also contributing to a larger national conversation: whether development can truly be called progress if it comes at the irreversible cost of forests, rivers, wetlands and the shared spaces that communities have relied upon for decades.
For many protesters across Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra, the answer is clear. Development, they argue, must not only create new infrastructure—it must also preserve the natural and cultural foundations on which future generations will depend.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
At The Logical Indian, we believe that development and conservation need not exist in opposition. India’s progress cannot be measured solely by the number of highways, townships or convention centres it builds, but also by how responsibly it safeguards the forests, wetlands, farmlands, public spaces and cultural landmarks that sustain communities. Citizen-led protests are not merely acts of resistance—they are reminders that inclusive governance requires transparency, meaningful public consultation and environmentally conscious planning.
As India continues to urbanise, the real challenge lies in pursuing development that is equitable, climate-resilient and rooted in the well-being of both people and the planet. Growth is most meaningful when it leaves future generations with opportunities—not irreversible losses.
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WHO says we should have 9 sqm open space per person. Mumbaikars are surviving on just 0.87 sqm. And now even that tiny bit is under attack.
— Prof. Varsha Eknath Gaikwad (@VarshaEGaikwad) June 29, 2026
Bandra’s Neville D’Souza Ground, the ONLY FIFA-standard ground in the whole city, where 10,000 young kids train every year; they want to… pic.twitter.com/OojdfO17Bq













