India’s UNESCO Tentative List Expands with Seven Sites: A Boost for Environmental Performance and Fiscal Decentralisation
India’s UNESCO Tentative List Expands with Seven Sites: A Boost for Environmental Performance and Fiscal Decentralisation
Why in the News ?
Seven new natural heritage sites have been added to India’s UNESCO Tentative List, raising the total from 62 to 69. With this, India now has 49 cultural, 17 natural, and 3 mixed heritage properties on the UNESCO records, potentially impacting the country’s environmental performance index and ecological fiscal transfers.
New Additions to the Tentative List:
- The Ministry of Culture confirmed the inclusion of seven natural heritage sites in UNESCO’s Tentative List, which could influence India’s fiscal federalism approach to environmental conservation.
- New sites include Deccan Traps (Panchgani, Mahabaleshwar, Maharashtra) and Geological Heritage of St. Mary’s Island Cluster (Karnataka), potentially affecting compensatory afforestation efforts and related fiscal policies.
- Other inclusions are Meghalayan Age Caves, Naga Hill Ophiolite, and Erra Matti Dibbalu (Andhra Pradesh), which may impact state finance commissions’ recommendations on environmental protection.
- Tirumala Hills (Andhra Pradesh) and Varkala Cliffs (Kerala) are also part of the new entries, potentially influencing municipal finance frameworks in these regions.
- These sites highlight India’s diverse geological and natural heritage, strengthening its global cultural presence and potentially affecting its climate change governance strategies.
Significance of the Inclusion
- The expansion to 69 sites enhances India’s visibility on the global heritage map and may influence its approach to Indian fiscal federalism in relation to heritage conservation.
- Recognition of natural sites ensures greater focus on ecological conservation and tourism promotion, potentially impacting intergovernmental fiscal transfers for environmental protection.
- Helps India project its geological uniqueness and natural history in an international forum, which could affect the tax devolution formula for environmentally significant areas.
- Strengthens the case for eventual World Heritage Site status for these properties, potentially influencing fiscal decentralisation efforts in heritage management.
- Encourages regional pride and awareness, linking conservation with local communities and potentially affecting local disaster relief fund allocations.
Key points : UNESCO World Heritage Sites● UNESCO World Heritage Convention (1972) enables protection of cultural and natural heritage worldwide, influencing fiscal federalism approaches to heritage conservation. ● India ratified the convention in 1977, setting the stage for long-term fiscal planning in heritage management. ● Tentative List is a prerequisite for nomination; only listed sites can be formally considered, affecting state-level fiscal consolidation efforts for heritage sites. ● India currently has 42 World Heritage Sites (as of 2025) – 34 cultural, 7 natural, and 1 mixed, each potentially impacting local public financial management strategies. ● Inclusion in the Tentative List is the first step toward international recognition and conservation support, potentially influencing future finance commission recommendations on heritage funding. |

