M D Madhusudan Profile picture
May 19, 2021 15 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Last week, one of the finest, gentlest humans I've ever known—Suresh Puttaswamy—lost his fight to Covid-19. His loss is devastating, not only to his family, but literally to tens of thousands of people with whom—and for whom—he toiled tirelessly, but quietly, his entire life …1
Although Suresh never received the recognition he truly deserved, he was a leader who cared deeply, both for nature and about people. His contributions to the conservation of Bandipur Tiger Reserve, and to the well-being of its adjoining villages, are, in my view, unrivalled …2
Growing up, Suresh understood two things well: hardship and nature. Dividing time between parents working on a tea-estate in the Nilgiris, and his grandmother living in a fringe village of Bandipur Tiger Reserve, he knew all too well what it was like to live on the edge …3
Our paths crossed when he joined us at @ncfindia in 1999. He'd just finished his Masters in Commerce and agreed to help manage our office while preparing for bank recruitment exams. But soon, when he stopped mentioning the exams, I knew he'd decided that he'd work with us …4
He learnt eagerly, worked hard and loved challenge. He quickly mapped out what our fledgling outfit needed and astutely read the differing abilities, limitations and quirks of our small team. He rarely brought problems for us to solve, and mostly solutions for us to consider …5
As we did fieldwork together—something he loved—I discovered his vast yet grounded understanding of how agricultural risk and uncertainty shaped the lives of villagers on the forest fringe, and how their deepening dependence on the park impoverished both community and nature …6
But Suresh was no ineffectual intellectual. He was already using his understanding to drive deep engagements with two key issues in his village: to improve regimes of rural credit, and to inspire and enable rural high-schoolers to pursue vocational and professional education …7
Although Suresh was a superb office manager, clearly this job only gave him means, not meaning. At this time, his early mentors, the filmmaker duo, Krupakar Senani and Yatish Kumar, a remarkable forester, were hatching an audacious plan for which they needed a co-conspirator …8
In 2005, Suresh left NCF to join Namma Sangha, a young NGO seeking to end firewood removal by the 38k families across 180 villages fringing Bandipur. Creatively enabling villagers embrace alternative fuels, they felt, would work better than coercion to halt fuelwood harvest …9
To this end, they found a myriad creative ways of crowdsourcing funds to make cooking gas affordable for villagers. They obtained volume discounts on gas stoves. They set up full door-delivery logistics for LPG in an underserved region. They became a most unusual gas agency …10
Suresh, with his deep understanding of the region, its conservation challenges, and his sensitivity to the hardships of villagers, spearheaded Namma Sangha's cooking gas campaign. Into this, he ploughed every dreary book-keeping and office management skill picked up at NCF …11
In between, we worked together again, this time on a community model of alleviating farm losses to wildlife. He helped organise distressed farmers into collectives that owned and managed communal solar electric fences, offering crop protection as a service to its subscribers …12
Today, Namma Sangha has helped over 40k families in this region get cooking gas. Barely anybody ventures into the forest to gather firewood. Time-series analyses of satellite imagery over this period shows how this effort helped Bandipur's northern fringes regain green cover …13
Suresh was the lynchpin of this effort. Not only did he enable this impact, he even managed to turn Namma Sangha profitable in the process. Yet he worried about how this profit—earned from converting adversaries into allies for Bandipur—could be used to make lives better …14
But sadly, we won't know what creative impulse this worry stirred.

Farewell, friend. I'll miss you. Your integrity. Your capacities. Your kindness. Your nasty digs at my weak tea. Your unwavering commitment to the idea that conservation can—and must—be fair and decent to people.

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More from @mdmadhusudan

Sep 7, 2022
In 20 y, mega construction has gobbled up parts of the Bellandur wetland, with a particularly egregious example (encircled)—a high-profile tech park, presumably—coming up right across the wetland’s main drainage channels.

And yet, we make this about ‘rajakaluve’ encroachments.
The fact is, it is more the big-ticket, formal urban development—all presumably ‘legal’—that has invaded the Bellandur and other wetlands of Bangalore, and less the small-time, informal urban settlements, whom we so love to blame for the current calamity. (Images: Google Earth)
Our planners and project proponents imagine they can train and discipline wide and unruly wetlands to flow obediently in developer-assigned channels… One heavy rain is all it takes to show that we cannot endlessly use engineering to thumb our noses at ecology and hydrology.
Read 5 tweets
Jan 16, 2022
LONG THREAD: Since 1987, India has assessed its forest cover every two years in its India State of Forest Reports (ISFR), produced by the Forest Survey of India (FSI). The 17th ISFR was released three days ago.

Here I take a closer look at the entire stack of ISFR reports…
The ISFR reports present lots of stats, but in this thread, I focus on the headline statistic: trends in India’s total forest cover over time.

So, let’s go… here, in one graph, is a 35y summary of the official line on our forest cover: from 1999, it has been nonstop good news.
India’s forest cover declined until 1997, after which it rose an whopping 45,000 km² over the next three reports. Two key changes in 2001 contributed to this: FSI adopted a fully digital analysis workflow, and it dramatically changed its definition of a forest (more on this soon)
Read 33 tweets
Jul 28, 2021
Where are India’s biologically-significant Open Natural Ecosystems (ONEs)?

Thread 👇🏽 on a new, open, and analysis-ready dataset on the distribution of India’s beautiful and beleaguered semi-arid Open Natural Ecosystems. (Representative image for each of the ecosystem types).
A large fraction of India’s landmass is semi-arid (annual rainfall < 1000 mm). The native vegetation in this zone is made up of grass, herbs and shrubs. They are often naturally without trees, and if at all trees do occur, cover is sparse. Yet, ONEs are staggeringly diverse.
Mirroring the diversity of habitats, ONEs also have a remarkable diversity of animal species, many of which are unique to the Indian subcontinent.
Read 19 tweets
Jun 26, 2021
A thread about the new 10m global landcover dataset released by ESRI and Microsoft, a quick look at how it fares for India, and some thoughts on making it better.

livingatlas.arcgis.com/landcover/
2/ Yesterday, @ESRI and @Microsoft, together with @ImpactObserv, released a globally-consistent landcover dataset at 10m resolution, obtained from classifying Sentinel2 imagery.

Foremost, what is fantastic and exemplary is that they released their data under a CC-BY 4.0 license.
3/ The possibilities of a 10m global landcover dataset are tantalising. And expectations high. Especially, when it describes itself by headlining detail and accuracy.
Read 16 tweets
Jun 16, 2021
Why would a shoddily-written, poorly-titled hit-piece—targeting a critically endangered bird and its mistreated grassland habitat, both struggling on the fringe of India's conservation consciousness—make it so big across so many news channels? Image
2/ To begin with, Bloomberg Green fearlessly ran down the Great Indian Bustard, saying that efforts to save this ‘slow’, ‘easily-frightened’ bird with ‘bad eyesight’ held risks for ‘green energy’ projects, God's very own gifts to the ‘wastelands’ of an energy-hungry nation. Image
3/ Instead of making other news outlets cautious, this piece was syndicated across multiple big business news channels. It was mostly run as-is, but the title was often creatively spun to ensure the bird got a good rap and a bad rep. ImageImageImageImage
Read 8 tweets
Apr 30, 2021
Two hours in the queue. The time slots given by the stupid CoWIN website don’t mean a thing in the difficult reality of your vaccination centre. Good old jostling is the only way. And oh, if know a shameless bureaucrat, they can always help you jump the queue.
Besides the elderly, the people whose life this registration website/app makes unspeakably worse are the immunisation workers. They have been forced to handle the unrealistic unmet expectations set by this site, and the public anger it precipitates.
And the hours people are forced to spend in close contact will itself multiply transmission risks greatly. And remember, the deluge hasn’t yet been let loose. It will be the cruelest irony that immunisation is itself becoming such a transmission risk.
Read 8 tweets

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