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Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 05 November 2025

  1. India’s forests hold the future
  2. Compound effect


 Why in News?

  • Government released the revised blueprint of the Green India Mission (GIM), targeting restoration of 25 million hectares of degraded forest and non-forest land by 2030.
  • It aligns with India’s NDC goal of creating an additional carbon sink of 2.5–3.0 billion tonnes of CO equivalent by 2030.

Relevance :

  • GS-3 (Environment & Ecology): Forest management, afforestation policy, carbon sink creation, biodiversity conservation.
  • GS-2 (Governance): FRA implementation, community participation, federal coordination.
  • GS-3 (Economy): Green financing, carbon markets, sustainable livelihoods.

Practice Question :

  • India’s afforestation drive must evolve from increasing canopy cover to restoring ecological functionality.” Examine in the context of the revised Green India Mission (2025).(250 Words)

Basics

  • Launched: 2014, under the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC).
  • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC).
  • Objective: Enhance ecosystem services — carbon sequestration, biodiversity conservation, and livelihood security.
  • Initial Target: 10 million ha (5 mha forest, 5 mha non-forest) — now expanded to 25 mha by 2030.

Context and Background

  • Between 2015–2021: GIM supported afforestation on 11.22 mha, with 575 crore disbursed to 18 states.
  • Forest & Tree Cover: Increased from 24.16% (2015) → 25.17% (2023).
  • CAMPA Funds: ₹95,000 crore corpus for compensatory afforestation, but underutilisation (Delhi used only 23% between 2019–2024).

Scientific Insight – Declining Forest Efficiency

IIT Kharagpur–IIT Bombay–BITS Pilani (2025) study:

  • Found 12% decline in photosynthetic efficiency of dense forests.
  • Causes: Rising temperature and soil desiccation.

Implication:

  • “More trees ≠ more carbon sinks.”
  • Need climate-resilient, native ecosystem restoration, not monocultures.

Major Features of the Revised GIM

  • Restoration Focus: Prioritises biodiversity-rich and climate-vulnerable landscapes — Aravallis, Western Ghats, Mangroves, Himalayan catchments.
  • Integration: Aligns with National Agroforestry Policy, CAMPA, and Watershed Mission.
  • Species Choice: Shift from monoculture plantations (eucalyptus, acacia) to native species (mahua, sal, teak).
  • Community-Centric Planning: Incorporates Joint Forest Management Committees (JFMCs) and FRA, 2006 provisions.
  • Capacity Building: Utilises forest training institutes (Uttarakhand, Coimbatore, Byrnihat).

Persistent Challenges

  1. Community Exclusion:
    1. 200 million Indians depend on forests.
    1. Afforestation drives often bypass FRA rights → social conflict, low legitimacy.
  2. Ecological Design Gap:
    1. Past reliance on fast-growing exotics reduced biodiversity and groundwater recharge.
  3. Financing & Utilisation:
    1. Huge CAMPA pool underused; implementation efficiency <50% in many states.
  4. Institutional Capacity:
    1. Limited ecological expertise among frontline staff; target-oriented rather than resilience-oriented afforestation.

Innovative State Models

  • Odisha: Integrated JFMCs into planning & benefit-sharing.
  • Chhattisgarh: Biodiversity-sensitive plantations; mahua-based livelihood model.
  • Tamil Nadu: Doubled mangrove cover in 3 years.
  • Himachal Pradesh: Biochar programme — carbon credits + fire management.
  • Uttar Pradesh: 39 crore saplings; linking panchayats with carbon markets.

Way Forward

  • Ecological Restoration over Plantation: Focus on soil, hydrology, and native diversity.
  • Empowered Communities: FRA-based participatory planning and monitoring.
  • Financial Efficiency: CAMPA + Carbon Market + CSR synergy.
  • Transparency: Public dashboards for fund use, species mix, survival rate.
  • Skill Development: Upgrade training for forest officials in restoration ecology.
  • Research Collaboration: Partner with IITs, ICFRE, and local universities for adaptive strategies.


Why in News?

  • The Supreme Court has ordered a comprehensive inquiry into the rising menace of digital scams in India, focusing on digital arrestfrauds where criminals impersonate law enforcement to extort money.
  • The Court highlighted the transnational and organized nature of these scams and their human trafficking linkages.

Relevance

  • GS-2 (Governance & IR): Cybercrime governance, international cooperation, trafficking.
  • GS-3 (Internal Security & Technology): Cybersecurity architecture, RBI’s digital risk management, cryptocurrency regulation.
  • GS-1 (Social Issues): Human trafficking and modern slavery dimensions.

Practice Question :

  • “Digital arrests and cryptocurrency-based scams represent the convergence of cybercrime, organised crime, and human trafficking.” Discuss with suitable examples.(250 Words)

Basics

  • Digital Scam: Online fraud involving deception through digital means (calls, social media, investment apps, crypto platforms).
  • Digital Arrest Scam: Criminals pose as police/CBI/ED officers, accuse victims of fake crimes, and extort money for “bail” or “settlement.”
  • Pig Butchering Scam: A long-term manipulation involving fake romantic/investment relationships to defraud victims, often through crypto.

Global Architecture of Scams

  • Operated from scam compounds in Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos, often within conflict zones and special economic zones (SEZs).
  • Victims are trafficked from India and Southeast Asia via fake job offers — especially through Bangkok exploiting visa-free travel.
  • Myanmar’s Border Guard Forces (BGF), allied with the military junta, host and profit from these scam centres.
  • Chinese organized crime networks control many of these transnational rackets.

Modus Operandi

  • Victims trafficked to compounds → trained/coerced under torture → forced to scam people globally.

Scams include:

  • Romance-investment (Pig Butchering)
  • Crypto frauds
  • Loan app blackmail
  • Fake digital arrests
  • Money flow: victims → “money mules” → shell accounts → conversion into cryptocurrency → laundering via Huione Pay (Cambodia) and other shadow networks.

Scale and Nature

  • Industrial-scale cybercrime with estimated global losses in billions of dollars annually.
  • Thousands of Indians trafficked as scam labourers; thousands more duped online.
  • Myanmar’s civil war post-2021 coup created a lawless ecosystem for such operations.

Implications for India

  • Security: Cross-border crime and trafficking threaten internal security.
  • Economy: Erodes trust in digital platforms, impacts fintech growth.
  • Governance: Tests cybercrime policing capacity and diplomatic leverage.
  • Human Rights: Indians trapped in forced scam labour — a modern slavery form.

Government & Institutional Role

  • RBI: To run awareness campaigns and enhance detection of mule accounts.
  • Union Home Ministry & State Cyber Cells: Strengthen cybercrime coordination and forensic capacity.
  • MEA: Use diplomatic channels with Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, China for rescue and crackdown.
  • CERT-In & National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal: To improve response time and citizen redress.

International Response Needed

  • Regional coordination with ASEAN and SAARC nations.
  • UN intervention: Recognise and act against “forced cybercrime labour” as modern slavery.
  • Global cooperation in crypto regulation, extradition, and information sharing.

Way Forward

  • Launch “Digital Literacy & Scam Awareness” campaigns nationwide.
  • Set up Cyber Scam Task Force under MHA integrating RBI, CERT-In, and MEA.
  • Collaborate with Interpol and FATF to trace crypto-laundered money.
  • Push for UN resolution treating digital scam slavery as an international crime.

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