India’s Forest Cover Growth: Hidden Challenges, Ecological Costs
Why in the news?
The ISFR-2023 reveals marginal forest cover growth, highlights increasing reliance on plantations, and raises concerns over the steady loss of dense natural forests in India.
Trends in Forest and Tree Cover
- According to ISFR-2023, India’s total green cover now exceeds 25%, with 21.76% as forest cover and 3.41% as tree cover.
- Tree cover showed a significant increase of 1,289 sq km, reflecting a sharp 0.5% growth in the last two years.
- In contrast, forest cover growth remains marginal, increasing by only 0.05% since 2021.
- Over two decades, the rise in tree cover is largely due to plantations, while the increase in natural forest cover has stagnated.
Decline in Dense Forests
- Between 2021 and 2023, India lost 3,913 sq km of dense forests, consistent with a 20-year trend of steady degradation.
- From 2003 to 2023, 24,651 sq km of dense forests were destroyed, half the size of Punjab.
- Although some losses were offset by plantations, natural dense forests are being replaced by monoculture plantations, raising ecological concerns.
- The reclassification of plantations as dense forests inflates growth statistics, masking the reality of forest degradation.
Implications of Plantation-Centric Growth
- Plantations, often monoculture, are less biodiverse, more vulnerable to pests and fires, and hinder natural forest regeneration.
- Unlike old-growth forests, plantations store less carbon and offer fewer ecological benefits.
- The UNFCCC has criticized India’s assumption that plantations match natural forest carbon stocks in just eight years.
- While plantations help meet carbon targets faster, their frequent harvesting undermines long-term climate goals.
India State of Forest Report (ISFR) 2023: Key Highlights
- Top States by Forest Cover (Area): Madhya Pradesh (77,073 sq km), Arunachal Pradesh (65,882 sq km), Chhattisgarh (55,812 sq km).
- Forest Cover (% of Area): Lakshadweep (91.33%), Mizoram (85.34%), Andaman & Nicobar Islands (81.62%).
- Overall Green Cover: Increased to 25.17% (21.76% forest, 3.41% tree).
- Notable Changes: Chhattisgarh, UP, Odisha, Rajasthan recorded the highest increases.
- Mangrove Cover: Total 4,992 sq km (7.43 sq km decline).
- Bamboo Area: Increased by 5,227 sq km to 1,54,670 sq km.
- Carbon Stock: Reached 30.43 Bt CO₂ equivalent, nearing NDC target.
Sources Referred:
PIB, The Hindu, Indian Express, Hindustan Times