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

  1. 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.
  2. 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.


POSTED ON 04-11-2025 BY ADMIN
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