• By Akansha Pandey
  • Fri, 05 Sep 2025 02:51 PM (IST)
  • Source:Jagran News Network

Five eastern Indian states—Odisha, Jharkhand, Bengal, Assam, and Chhattisgarh—have become the epicenter of a severe and deadly human-elephant conflict, with Odisha and Jharkhand being the worst affected. Recent data reveals a disturbing trend where these states, home to just 10 per cent of India's elephant population, witness a staggering 55 per cent of all human deaths from elephant attacks nationwide. 

According to the latest figures from 2019 to 2024, a total of 2,829 people have died in elephant attacks across India. The crisis is most acute in the east:

- Odisha topped the list with 624 deaths.

- Jharkhand recorded the second-highest number with 474 deaths.

- Bengal, Assam, and Chhattisgarh followed as the third, fourth, and fifth most affected states, respectively.

Why is the Conflict Escalating? Destroyed Corridors and Shrinking Forests

The primary drivers of this conflict are habitat loss and the disruption of natural elephant corridors (traditional pathways for migration).

In Jharkhand, widespread coal mining and the expansion of human settlements into forest areas have blocked these corridors. This forces elephants into villages, leading to fatal encounters and massive crop destruction.

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In Odisha, the situation is critical due to rapidly shrinking forest areas. A key elephant corridor stretching from Saranda Forest (Asia's densest forest) in Jharkhand to Sundargarh in Odisha has been devastated by mining, causing elephants to stray.

The Elephants are Dying Too: A Silent Tragedy

The conflict is equally deadly for the elephants. Between 2019 and 2024, 528 elephants died, with a shocking 392 of them killed by electrocution from illegal electric fences and power lines. This highlights the extreme dangers elephants face when forced out of their natural habitats.

Government Efforts and the Path Forward

Despite various government measures, the death toll continues to rise.

Odisha's 'Jana Suraksha, Gaja Raksha' (People's Safety, Elephant's Protection) scheme, which uses solar fences and Kumki elephants (specially trained captive elephants), has not yet been able to curb the deaths.

Jharkhand is using drones and Quick Response Teams for monitoring, but these efforts are proving insufficient.

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The central government's Project Elephant has established 33 elephant sanctuaries, and states have been advised to promote alternative crops that elephants dislike, such as chili and lemongrass. However, experts agree that a long-term solution is impossible without the urgent restoration of the critical elephant corridor between Odisha and Jharkhand.