Releasing the detailed project report (DPR), Bharati said Brahmadrav is "not a myth or faith but fact" as she insisted on planting of "suitable" vegetation to ensure ecological flow (e-flow) of the river is adequate.
"We should keep in mind which species to be planted along the river. Ganga has an exclusive property called Brahmadrav, which ensures its water remains clean. Brahmadrav is not some myth or issue of faith alone.
The Minister noted Ganga cannot be cleaned by only installing effluent treatment plants and sewage treatment plants alone and stressed forestation will play a bigger part in ensuring unfettered waterflow in the river.
Suggesting that no river like Ganga can be cleaned over a short span of time, the Minister cited examples of Rhine and Thames rivers, which she said took 40 years and 27 years respectively to be cleaned.
In the same breath, the Minister though said Prime Minister Narendra Modi is a special person who can complete a work in short span of time.
Bharati said Ganga water can only be considered as clean if its aquatic life is in proper shape.
She said those who pollute the river by letting industrial waste and sewage in Ganga are "committing sins" by devoting the river water to their deceased ancestors (as part of rituals).
Without naming the previous UPA government, he said that
no forestation was carried out in the country over the past 10-12 years.
He said the second leg of the budget session of Parliament will see passage of Compensatory Afforestation Fund (CAF) Bill 2015, which will pave way for expeditious utilisation of funds realised for forest land diverted to non-forest purposes in a transparent manner.
Javadekar said there was a drop in pollution in Ganga and claimed the government has "near-succeeded" in stopping flow of "black liquor and spent discharge" into the river.
He further added his ministry has drafted a policy to ensure sustainable sand mining across rivers.
The government has earmarked Rs 2293.73 crore for carrying out forestry intervention. Of this, Rs 951 crore will be spent during 2016-17. Nearly 90 per cent of the fund will be spent on the intervention.
A day-long workshop was also organised to mark the release of DPR in which Senior officials from Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal, environmentalists, scientists, representatives of Eco Task Force, ITBP, Nehru Yuva Kendra Sangathan and Civil Society organizations were present.
This included use of remote sensing and GIS technologies for spatial analysis and modeling of pre-delineated Ganga riverscape covering 83,946 sq km out of a much larger Ganga River basin within the country, it said.
The FRI designed four sets of field data formats to obtain the site-based information on proposed forestry plantations in natural, agriculture and urban landscapes along the river course and other conservation interventions. More than 8,000 data sheets were obtained from five states along the river course.
