- Home
- Prelims
- Mains
- Current Affairs
- Study Materials
- Test Series
Latest News
Towards Inclusive and Sustainable Forest Governance
India’s forest restoration strategy must evolve from mere afforestation to inclusive, ecologically sound, and financially sustainable models to meet climate goals.
- Forests are central to India’s climate strategy, especially under the revised Green India Mission (GIM), which aims to restore 25 million hectares of degraded land by 2030.
- This aligns with India’s climate pledge to create an additional carbon sink of 3.39 billion tonnes of CO₂ equivalent.
Key Challenges in Afforestation
- Declining Forest Efficiency:
- A 2025 IIT study shows a 12% drop in photosynthetic efficiency due to rising temperatures and soil dryness, questioning the assumption that more trees always mean more carbon absorption.
- Three Persistent Gaps:
- Community Participation: Despite the Forest Rights Act (2006), many plantation drives ignore tribal and local communities.
- Ecological Design: Over-reliance on monocultures (e.g., eucalyptus) harms biodiversity and groundwater.
- Financing: Underutilization of funds like CAMPA, which holds ₹95,000 crore, limits impact.
Promising Interventions
- Ecological Restoration:
- Shift toward native, site-specific species.
- Focus on biodiversity-rich zones: Aravalli Hills, Western Ghats, mangroves, Himalayan catchments.
- Community-Led Models:
- Odisha: Joint Forest Management Committees involved in planning and revenue sharing.
- Chhattisgarh: Mahua plantations revive tribal livelihoods.
- Innovative Financing:
- Himachal Pradesh: Biochar for carbon credits and fire risk reduction.
- Uttar Pradesh: 39 crore saplings planted; exploring carbon market linkages.
Institutional and Policy Support
- Integration with:
- National Agroforestry Policy
- Watershed programmes
- CAMPA
- Training institutes in Uttarakhand, Coimbatore, Byrnihat can build ecological capacity.
Way Forward
- Empower communities as custodians of forests.
- Enhance transparency via public dashboards tracking survival rates, species mix, fund use.
- Broaden CAMPA’s scope to include participatory planning and adaptive management.
- Leverage civil society and research institutions for technical and monitoring support.
General Studies