What is the issue?
- A recent study looks critically at India’s National Mission for a Green India.
- It highlights that the goals under it assume arbitrary targets rooted in habits of “(neo)colonial governance” rather than “sound science”.
What is the Green India mission?
- The Green India Mission is one of the 8 missions under the National Action Plan on Climate Change.
- It is a $7billion environmental intervention, laid out in 2011.
- The mission aims at protecting, restoring and enhancing India’s diminishing forest cover.
- It is intended at responding to climate change by a combination of adaptation and mitigation measures.
- It seeks to put a third of the country under forest cover by increasing forest and tree cover to the extent of 5 million hectares (mha).
- Besides, there are efforts at improving quality of forest/tree cover on another 5 mha of forest/non-forest lands.
- The mission is also planned with improving forest-based livelihoods.
How is the afforestation approach in India?
- Over two centuries, afforestation has been viewed as a solution for a variety of ills.
- These include civilizational decline, diminished precipitation, warming temperatures, soil erosion, and decreasing biodiversity.
- Forest cover of Europe in the colonial period was estimated at roughly one-third.
- An afforestation rate of 30-33% became the widely accepted minimum for civilization.
- This targeted minimum, as a concept, was exported to India and continued to influence generations of forest policymakers in India.
- Despite the nature of arid and semi-arid ecosystems and the knowledge of local communities, the imported mechanism continued as a compulsion in India.
Why is it flawed?
- There is an obsession with tree-planting in India that has its roots in the colonial forestry bureaucracy.
- The approach is to plant trees to make up for deforestation and grazing habits of local people, especially pastoralists.
- The commitment to fixed rates of forest cover encourages tree plantations in ecologically inappropriate sites and conditions.
- Another problem of plantation ecologies in India is the enthusiasm for fast growing species and exotic and invasive species.
- Afforestation typically extends the “authority” of Indian state forest departments, mostly at the expense of local livelihoods rather than in support of them.
- This has historically performed a reverse role of disinheriting forest-rooted populations.
- Moreover, aggressive afforestation projects in India direct resources toward tree-planting, without addressing the drivers of widespread deforestation.
- So in all, there is much of 'planting' and essentially less of 'greening'.
What should be done?
- Greening would take a socio-ecological approach that treats the system as a whole.
- It means a ‘Restoration Ecology’ of grasslands, streams, mixed scrub, agro-forestry, and so on.
- The afforestation efforts should take seriously the peculiarity of local systems to preserve the diversity of the Indian ecological mosaic.
- The approach should move out from the colonial mindset and adopt a scientific view, for true 'greening'.
Source: The Indian Express
Quick Facts
NAPCC
The eight missions under the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) are as follows:
- National Water Mission
- Green India Mission
- National Solar Mission
- National Mission on Sustainable Habitat
- National Mission on Enhanced Energy Efficiency
- National Mission for Sustaining Himalayan Ecosystem
- National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture
- National Mission on Strategic Knowledge for Climate Changes