A fifth of the Himalayan republic's total lands have been designated as protected areas established to forbid infrastructure projects that could damage the environment.
Nepal has been praised worldwide for combating poachers and conserving wildlife, allowing it to bring several animal species back from the brink of local extinction.
However, the government enacted an ordinance last month allowing it to approve infrastructure projects in national parks, forests and other conservation areas.
"The number of endangered tigers and one-horned rhinos in the country have thrived because of these protected areas as they found a favourable environment," Rampreet Yadav, a wildlife conservationist, told AFP.
"This decision allowing construction of infrastructure will surely impact their habitat."
Yadav, who is also the former chief conservation officer of Chitwan National Park, Nepal's most important conservation area, said the decision was driven by the "vested interests of political leaders".
"We will have nothing to show and give our next generation," he said.
Nepal's protected habitat laws have seen the country triple the local tiger population to 355 since 2010, while the number of one-horned rhinoceros also rose to 752 in 2021 from around a hundred in the 1960s.
It also nearly doubled its forest cover between 1992 and 2016 after rampant logging.
Nepal has been keen to further develop its hydropower industry after a dam-building spree since the turn of the century that has given it an installed capacity of more than 2,600 megawatts.
It signed a deal with India in January to export 10,000 megawatts of hydroelectricity over the next decade to its energy-hungry neighbour.
Tourism is also a major earner for Nepal, which saw a million foreign visitors last year after a post-pandemic bounceback, and investments are being made in hotels and airports to cater to travellers.
Environment ministry spokesperson Badri Raj Dhungana said the new regulations had been introduced to bring a balance between environmental protection and development.
"They will not be constructed in very sensitive areas. We will need a work plan with proper mapping," he said.
But Padma Bahadur Shrestha, a lawyer specialising in litigation aimed at nature protection, said the decision showed the government was set on casting aside environmental concerns in its rush for development.
"It wants to destroy Nepal's biodiversity to make new infrastructure," he said.
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