Assam: Solar fence set up to facilitate human-elephant coexistence

About 11 kilometer-long solar-powered fence has been installed covering 17 villages on the fringe of Raimon National Park (RNP) in Kokrajhar district to provide respite from human-elephant conflict (HEC) to 870 households.
Assam: Solar fence set up to facilitate human-elephant coexistence
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Guwahati: About 11 kilometer-long solar-powered fence has been installed covering 17 villages on the fringe of Raimon National Park (RNP) in Kokrajhar district to provide respite from human-elephant conflict (HEC) to 870 households. The solar fence has been installed in two phases by the research-oriented biodiversity conservation organisation Aaranyak as part of its continued efforts to facilitate human-elephant coexistence using solar-powered fence as a tool for mitigation of the raging conflict between the two species in certain parts of Assam and Meghalaya.

The solar fence to protect these villages has been installed with support from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and in collaboration with the local community and Forest Department of Bodoland Territorial Region (BTR), Assam.

These fence are managed by the community members who are trained on solar fence maintenance and monitoring by Aaranyak resource team prior to the installation. A 6.55 km long solar-powered and single-wire electric fence was installed to protect 600 households in 11 villages on the fringe of RNP — Takampur, Pulodabri, Araisopara, East Takampur, Santipur, Bharatpur, Bharatnagar-Adivasi Basti, Susilpur, Baganpara, Nepalipara and Nabin Nagar which are under Kachugaon Block. The fence installation work which was started on January 29 with erection of posts and clearing of weeds, was completed on February 12.

Earlier, Aaranyak, in the first phase, had installed a 4 km- long single- wire solar electric fence covering six fringe area villages of the RNP to protect 270 households in the month of August last year in the western. The villages covered under the first phase of fence installation included Dom Bazar, Hazariguri, Nandipur-1, Nandipur-2, Gwajanpur and Lotamari-1. The population patter of these  villages are dominated by indigenous Bodo tribe.

During the fence installation  process, the members of the local community whose crop fields and dwelling places have been protected by the solar fence from wild elephants,  played an important role by contributing posts and labourers required for the purpose.

The total length of solar fence on the fringe of the RNP has now added up to 17.05 km as WWF had earlier installed another fence of 6.5 km length to protect six fringe villages and 298 households  – Santipur (39 houses), Hadanpur (14 houses), Golcipara (45), No.3 Rupnathpur ( 127 houses), Bathawguri (28) houdses), Takanpur (45 houses), stated a press release.

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