National Forest Policy & Green India Mission – UPSC Notes

National Forest Policy | NAP | CAMPA | Bamboo Mission | Green India Mission | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
UPSC Prelims + Mains · Environment & Ecology · Current Affairs 2023–2025

National Forest Policy, Afforestation Programmes & Bamboo Mission 🌱

NFP 1988 vs Draft 2018 · NAP · CAMPA/CAF Act 2016 · Aerial Seeding · National Bamboo Mission · Green India Mission · Van Sanrakshan Adhiniyam 2023 · Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam 2024

1

National Forest Policy — 1988 & Draft 2018

India has had 3 forest policies: 1894 (British, revenue) → 1952 (balanced) → 1988 (ecology-first)

💡 The Big Shift: From “Forest = ATM” to “Forest = Lungs of the Nation”

India’s 1894 British forest policy treated forests primarily as revenue sources. Even the 1952 policy balanced ecology with commercial exploitation. The 1988 policy was a revolution — it explicitly declared that “the derivation of direct economic benefit must be subordinate to the principal aim” (ecological balance). This reversed the priority order completely. Forests were no longer a source of timber revenue — they were India’s ecological infrastructure, as vital as roads and dams. The policy also reversed the beneficiary priority: environment came first, then communities and tribal people, and industrial timber last.

Constitutional Basis of Forest Policy
Forests in the Constitution
  • Article 48A (Directive Principles of State Policy): “The State shall endeavour to protect and improve the environment and to safeguard the forests and wildlife of the country”
  • Article 51A(g) (Fundamental Duties): “It shall be the duty of every citizen to protect and improve the natural environment including forests, lakes, rivers and wildlife…”
  • Concurrent List (42nd Amendment Act, 1976): Forests and Protection of Wild Animals and Birds transferred from State List to Concurrent List — both Centre and States can legislate
  • Godavarman Case (1996): Supreme Court defined “forests” to mean all areas that are forests in the dictionary meaning of the term, irrespective of ownership or classification — landmark expansion of protection
NFP 1988 vs Draft NFP 2018 — Side-by-Side Comparison
✅ National Forest Policy 1988 — Officially in Force
  • Principal aim: Environmental stability and ecological balance (atmospheric equilibrium) — NOT revenue or timber
  • Target: 33% of land under forest/tree cover; 67% in hills/mountains
  • Priority order: Environment → Community needs → Tribal rights → Industrial timber (reversed from 1952)
  • Economic benefit: Must be subordinate to principal ecological aim
  • JFM: Promotes Joint Forest Management — community-based protection
  • Social forestry: Trees on denuded lands, canal/road sides, farm lands
  • Industrial demand: Must be met from farm/social forestry, NOT natural forests
  • Status: Currently operative — guides all forest management in India
📋 Draft National Forest Policy 2018 — Still a Draft
  • Released: March 2018 by MoEFCC — NOT yet officially adopted (remains a draft)
  • New additions: PPP (Public-Private Partnerships) for afforestation in degraded areas; Urban greening; Climate change focus; Forest certification; Economic valuation of ecosystem services; National Forest Ecosystem Management Information System
  • Production forestry: Identified as a new thrust area — shift toward timber and industry
  • Criticisms:
    • Shifts from ecology/community to timber/industry
    • Dilutes tribal and forest-dwelling community rights
    • “Production forestry” as thrust area raises concerns
    • Critics say it makes forests a commercial resource again
  • The 1988 policy continues to be in force until the 2018 draft is officially adopted
Major Achievements of NFP 1988
What NFP 1988 Achieved
  • Forest and tree cover increased from 19.7% (ISFR 1987) to 25.17% (ISFR 2023) — a gain of ~5.5% in 36 years
  • Establishment of Joint Forest Management (JFM) — India has the world’s largest JFM system. Over 1.18 lakh JFMCs protecting over 22 million hectares
  • Conservation of biological diversity and genetic resources through in-situ + ex-situ measures
  • Meeting fuel wood, fodder, minor forest produce needs of rural/tribal communities without degrading forests
  • Significant contribution to maintaining ecological stability and carbon sequestration

⭐ NFP Memory — All Key Numbers

  • 3 policies: 1894 (British/revenue) → 1952 (balanced) → 1988 (ecology-first) → Draft 2018
  • Target: 33% total | 67% in hills | Current: 25.17%
  • Principal aim: Environmental stability + ecological balance = “atmospheric equilibrium”
  • Priority: Environment → Community → Tribal → Industry
  • Constitutional basis: Art 48A (DPSP) + Art 51A(g) (FD) + Concurrent List (42nd Amendment)
  • JFM: ~1.18 lakh JFMCs22 million ha managed by communities
  • Draft 2018 criticism: “Production forestry” thrust → dilutes community/ecology priority
2

National Afforestation Programme (NAP)

Flagship scheme for ecological restoration of degraded forests — now merged into GIM
🌳

National Afforestation Programme (NAP) Launched 2002

Under NAEB · MoEFCC · Now merged with Green India Mission (GIM)
  • Launched: 2002 by the National Afforestation and Eco-Development Board (NAEB) under MoEFCC
  • Objective: Ecological restoration of degraded forests and adjoining areas with people’s participation; improve livelihoods of forest-fringe communities (especially the poor and tribal)
  • Key feature: Decentralises forest management to village-level Joint Forest Management Committees (JFMCs)
  • 3-tier structure:
    • State Forest Development Agency (SFDA) — state level
    • Forest Development Agency (FDA) — forest division level
    • JFMCs — village level (the grassroots implementing body)
  • Funding pattern: 60:40 Centre:State for most states | 90:10 for NE and hilly states | 100% centrally funded for UTs
  • NAP merged into GIM: Ministry approved merger of NAP into Green India Mission (GIM) — both now under one budgetary head to augment overall greening efforts
  • NAEB activities: Also runs National Natural Resource Management System (NNRMS), eco-development camp schemes, and capacity-building training
3

Compensatory Afforestation (CA) & CAMPA

The “you clear a forest, you must grow one elsewhere” principle — backed by Rs 54,685 crore

💡 Think of CAMPA Like a “Forest Carbon Credit Penalty System”

When a company builds a road, dam, or mine through a forest, it must: (1) Provide equivalent non-forest land for new plantation; (2) Pay the Net Present Value (NPV) of the forest destroyed — Rs 9.5–16 lakh per hectare depending on forest quality. This money goes into the CAMPA fund. States use CAMPA funds to carry out actual afforestation. The system acknowledges that a 50-year-old forest cleared today cannot be replaced immediately — hence the NPV payment covers the “service gap” until new trees mature. The problem: A monoculture plantation can never fully replace a biodiverse natural forest.

CAMPA — Historical Timeline
1

Forest Conservation Act 1980 — The Legal Foundation

FCA 1980 mandated that any diversion of forest land for non-forest use requires prior approval of Central Government. Any such diversion must be compensated by afforestation on equal area of non-forest land. This was the origin of the concept of Compensatory Afforestation (CA).

2

Supreme Court Orders CAMPA Creation — Godavarman Case (2002)

In T.N. Godavarman Thirumalpad vs Union of India, the Supreme Court ordered creation of CAMPA in 2002 after finding that compensatory afforestation funds were being under-utilised. CAMPA established in 2004 — National Advisory Council under Union Environment Minister to manage funds.

3

CAF Act 2016 — Statutory CAMPA Replaces Ad-hoc CAMPA

Parliament passed the Compensatory Afforestation Fund (CAF) Act, 2016. Rules notified in 2018. This gave CAMPA a permanent statutory basis replacing the Court-ordered ad-hoc arrangement. National Fund (10%) + State Funds (90%). Rs 54,685 crore transferred from Ad-hoc CAMPA to states by 2019.

4

Van Sanrakshan Adhiniyam 2023 Amendments — Latest Updates

The Forest (Conservation) Amendment Act 2023 (renamed to Van Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan Adhiniyam) and the Amendment Rules 2025 made CA notification of land optional (previously mandatory) — a significant change that has drawn criticism from conservationists.

💰

CAMPA — Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management & Planning Authority CAF Act 2016

National Fund (10%) + State Funds (90%) · Rs 54,685 crore · NPV rates Rs 9.5–16 lakh/ha
  • Legal basis: CAF (Compensatory Afforestation Fund) Act 2016, Rules notified 2018
  • Fund split: National Fund: 10% of total | State Funds: 90%
  • Fund utilised for: (i) Compensatory afforestation | (ii) NPV of diverted forest | (iii) Project-specific payments; also wildlife habitat improvement, fire control, soil/water conservation
  • NPV rates: Rs 9.5 lakh to Rs 16 lakh per hectare depending on forest quality/density
  • Total corpus: Rs 54,685 crore transferred to states from Ad-hoc CAMPA (by 2019)
  • CAG audit: CAMPA accounts audited by Comptroller and Auditor General of India
  • Community link: CAMPA activities implemented by engaging local communities in afforestation, nursery raising, soil-water conservation
🔴 Criticisms of CAMPA/Compensatory Afforestation
  • No timeframe: CAF Act 2016 has no legally mandated deadline for when compensatory forests must be created
  • Monocultures: Companies often plant single-species plantations — very low biodiversity value vs natural forest
  • Distributed land: Compensatory land often spread across 20+ scattered locations — no ecological coherence
  • Biotic pressure: Plantation sites face heavy pressure from nearby human habitations and cattle
  • Greenwashing: Critics say CA has “legitimised clearing of forests” by putting a price tag on them — a form of greenwashing
  • Parliamentary Standing Committee: Called the CAF Act 2016 “highly bureaucratic” with weak implementation
  • NPV inadequacy: No plantation can deliver the same biodiversity, water recharge, or carbon sequestration as a natural forest — NPV payment doesn’t capture real ecological loss
4

Aerial Seeding for Reforestation

Dropping seeds from aircraft/drones over inaccessible terrain — innovative but limited
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Aerial Seeding — Method and Use in India Drone-era

Used in Uttarakhand · Himachal Pradesh · Andaman & Nicobar · Post-fire restoration
  • What it is: Seeds (sometimes in seed balls or pellets) are dropped from aircraft or drones over forested areas — particularly terrain that is too remote, steep, or fire-damaged to access by foot
  • Used in India: Uttarakhand (post-forest fire restoration 2021–22), Himachal Pradesh, Andaman & Nicobar Islands (coastal restoration)
  • Species used: Fast-growing native species — Banj Oak (Quercus leucotrichophora), Rhododendron, Semal, Chir Pine in Himalayan regions; native seeds appropriate to each region’s ecology
  • Drone-based aerial seeding (updated): India’s Forest departments now increasingly use drones for precision seed delivery in post-fire and post-landslide restoration — more targeted than fixed-wing aircraft, can navigate steep terrain
  • Advantages: Covers large areas quickly · Reaches inaccessible/dangerous terrain · Cost-effective at scale · Fast turnaround for post-disaster restoration
  • Limitations:
    • Low germination success rate — seeds exposed to predation, wind, surface runoff
    • Not suitable for all species (especially those needing transplant shock)
    • Monoculture risk if only one species seeded
    • Less effective without adequate post-seeding monitoring and protection
5

National Bamboo Mission (NBM)

The “poor man’s timber” becomes a climate-resilient crop — big 2017 legal change

💡 The Bamboo Revolution: From Dangerous “Tree” to Farmers’ Profitable Crop

Before 2017, bamboo grown on a farmer’s land was legally classified as a “tree” under the Indian Forest Act 1927. This meant a farmer had to get government permission to cut bamboo on his own land — a bizarre situation that made bamboo cultivation economically unviable for farmers. The 2017 amendment removed bamboo grown outside forests from the definition of “tree”. Now a farmer can plant, harvest, and sell bamboo freely. Combined with the Restructured NBM 2018-19 — which connects farmers to markets and processing units — this has transformed bamboo from a bureaucratic headache into a profitable, climate-resilient cash crop.

🎋

National Bamboo Mission (NBM) — Restructured 2018-19 Ministry of Agriculture

Centrally Sponsored Scheme · Hub & Spoke cluster model · NOT under MoEFCC!
  • Under: Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers WelfareNOT MoEFCC. This is the most common UPSC trap about NBM!
  • Original NBM: Launched 2006-07 under MoEFCC. Absorbed by MIDH (Mission for Integrated Development of Horticulture) in 2014-15.
  • Restructured NBM: Relaunched 2018-19 as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme under Ministry of Agriculture — with a fresh mandate and approach
  • Model: Hub-and-Spoke cluster approach — processing industries (hubs) connected to bamboo-growing farmers (spokes) in clusters across suitable regions
  • Objective: Develop the complete bamboo value chain — from plantation to market. Planting material → plantation → collection → processing → marketing → branding → export
  • Subsidy: Farmers: 50% subsidy at Rs 1 lakh per hectare | Government agencies: 100% | Entrepreneurs (processing units): 100%
  • Funding: 60:40 Centre:State | 90:10 for NE/hilly states | 100% for UTs and Bamboo Technology Support Groups
  • Non-forest bamboo land: Bamboo grown on non-forest land only — aligns with 2017 Forest Act amendment
  • Key 2017 legal change: Indian Forest Act 1927 amended in 2017 — bamboo growing outside forests is no longer classified as “tree” — farmers can harvest freely without permit
  • ISFR 2023 data: Bamboo area = 1,54,670 sq km (+5,227 sq km vs 2021) | Max: MP → Arunachal Pradesh → Maharashtra
  • India globally: 2nd largest bamboo producer after China | ~136 species of bamboo in India
Why Bamboo Matters — Key Uses and Significance
  • Climate resilient: Grows in degraded soils, drought-tolerant, sequesters carbon faster than most trees
  • Economic: Construction (including bamboo as steel substitute), handicrafts, furniture, agarbatti (incense), paper, packaging, biochar, textile (bamboo fabric)
  • Food: Bamboo shoots — a key food source for NE India communities and for wildlife (Giant Panda, Red Panda)
  • Livelihoods: Over 8 million artisans depend on bamboo in India; major source of income for NE states, tribal communities
  • Environmental: Prevents soil erosion, water conservation in degraded wastelands
  • Agarbatti connection: India imports large quantities of bamboo from China for agarbatti sticks — NBM aims to reduce this import dependency
6

Green India Mission (GIM) — NAPCC Mission 6 Revised June 2025

One of 8 NAPCC missions · Beyond just tree planting — full ecosystem restoration
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National Mission for a Green India (GIM) Launched 2014

One of 8 NAPCC missions · MoEFCC · NAP merged into GIM · Revised 2021-2030 plan released June 2025
  • One of 8 missions under the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) — launched 2008 by PM Manmohan Singh
  • GIM formally launched: February 2014 as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme under MoEFCC
  • Aim: Protect, restore and enhance India’s diminishing forest cover; respond to climate change through adaptation and mitigation
  • 10-year targets:
    • Increase forest/tree cover on 5 million hectares (mha) of forest/non-forest land
    • Improve quality of cover on another 5 mha = total 10 mha treatment
    • Enhance livelihood income of ~3 million forest-dependent households
    • Enhance annual CO₂ sequestration by 50–60 million tonnes by 2020
  • Scope beyond trees: GIM focuses on multiple ecosystem services: biodiversity, water, biomass, carbon, mangroves, wetlands, critical habitats
  • Unique feature: GIM has a preparatory phase of 1 year — unique among NAPCC missions
  • Funding: Centre:State = 75:25 for most states | 90:10 for NE states
  • Convergence: Implemented under convergence with MGNREGA, CAMPA, and NAP (NAP now merged into GIM)
  • Progress (2015-2021): Supported tree plantation/afforestation across 11.22 million hectares; ₹624.71 crore allocated to 18 states (2019-2024), ₹575.55 crore utilised
  • Revised GIM Plan 2021-2030: Released June 17, 2025 (World Day to Combat Desertification) — region-specific ecological approach; focuses on Aravallis, Himalayas, Western Ghats. Aravalli Green Wall Project: ₹16,053 crore to restore 8 lakh hectares
  • Challenge: GIM had only achieved ~30% of its original 2015-21 target — implementation gaps
📌 8 NAPCC Missions — Quick Reference
  • National Solar Mission · National Mission for Enhanced Energy Efficiency · National Mission on Sustainable Habitat · National Water Mission · National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem · National Mission for a Green India (GIM) · National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture · National Mission on Strategic Knowledge for Climate Change
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Van (Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan) Adhiniyam, 1980 — 2023 Amendment August 2023

Forest Conservation Act renamed and significantly amended — biggest change since 1980
⚖️

Forest (Conservation) Amendment Act 2023 August 2023

Renamed FCA 1980 → Van (Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan) Adhiniyam 1980 · Most significant forest law change in decades
  • New name: Forest (Conservation) Act 1980 renamed to Van (Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan) Adhiniyam, 1980 = “Forest (Conservation and Augmentation) Act” — reflects addition of afforestation/augmentation mandate
  • Added preamble: A preamble was inserted broadening the scope of the Act
  • Clarified scope (who it applies to): The Act applies to:
    • Land notified as forest under Indian Forest Act 1927 or any other law
    • Land recorded as forest in government records on or after October 25, 1980
    • Does NOT include land already officially converted to non-forest use before 1996
  • Key exemptions introduced:
    • National security projects within 100 km of international borders (LAC, LoC, International Border) — exempt from forest clearance
    • Up to 0.10 ha for road connectivity to habitations/establishments near roads and railways
    • Up to 10 ha for security-related infrastructure
    • Up to 5 ha in Left Wing Extremism (LWE) affected districts for public utility projects
    • Zoos and safaris (under WPA 1972) in forest areas outside Protected Areas — now permitted
  • Incentivises private afforestation: Private parties who plant on degraded forest areas can now receive forest land rights — incentivises restoration
  • Amendment Rules 2025 (latest): CA land notification made optional; plantation/afforestation on forest land reclassified as “forestry activity” (not non-forest use) — controversial change
🔴 Controversies and Criticisms — VSA 2023
  • Waters down Godavarman judgment (1996): Experts say the Act narrows application compared to SC’s broad definition of forests
  • Dilutes tribal rights: Forest Rights Act (FRA) 2006 protections may be weakened for exempted lands near borders
  • Centralisation: States say forest is in Concurrent List but amendments tilt governance toward Centre
  • SC direction 2024: Supreme Court directed states/UTs to follow the 1996 Godavarman definition of “forest” until identification of forest land under the 2023 Act is completed — a corrective measure
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Other Key Forest & Afforestation Initiatives

Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam, Nagar Van Yojana, JFM, and policy context
🔴 Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam — 2024 Campaign June 2024
  • Launched by PM Narendra Modi on World Environment Day, 5th June 2024
  • Full name: “Plant 4 Mother” / “Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam” — citizens encouraged to plant a tree in honour of their mothers
  • Goal: Plant 1 billion trees globally in 2024 (India’s contribution target: 140 crore trees — one per citizen)
  • Aligns with India’s commitment to increase forest and tree cover as part of its NDC target under the Paris Agreement
  • India completed its tree plantation target of 1 billion+ trees in the campaign — reported by MoEFCC
Nagar Van Yojana (NVY) — Urban Forests Launched 2020
  • Launched: 2020 by MoEFCC
  • Target: 600 Nagar Vans (city forests) + 400 Nagar Vatikas (urban gardens) by 2024-25
  • Purpose: Develop urban forests in and around cities to improve air quality, biodiversity, green cover, and recreational space
  • Implemented with: Urban local bodies, state governments, and citizens
Joint Forest Management (JFM) — Community-Based Conservation
  • JFM = partnership between state forest departments and local communities for joint protection and management of forests
  • Communities (through JFMCs) protect forest from encroachment, fire, and illegal felling — in exchange for rights to collect minor forest produce and share in benefits
  • India has the world’s largest JFM system: ~1.18 lakh JFMCs protecting 22+ million hectares
  • Emerged from NFP 1988 recommendations; formalised in 1990 MoEFCC circular
  • Key success: Forest departments previously treated forests as state property; JFM democratised forest governance
  • Challenge: JFMCs often lack legal rights under formal law — Forest Rights Act 2006 provides stronger rights for scheduled tribes and other traditional forest dwellers
All Afforestation Programmes — Quick Reference Table
Programme/PolicyYearUnderKey Point for UPSC
National Forest Policy (NFP)1988MoEFCC33% target; 67% for hills; Ecology > Community > Tribal > Industry; JFM; Still operative
Draft NFP 20182018 (draft)MoEFCCNOT adopted yet; PPP, production forestry, climate focus; critics: dilutes tribal rights
National Afforestation Programme (NAP)2002NAEB/MoEFCCDegraded forest restoration; 60:40 funding; 3-tier: SFDA-FDA-JFMC; Merged into GIM
CAMPA / CAF ActSC 2002; CAF Act 2016MoEFCCNational 10%, State 90%; NPV Rs 9.5-16L/ha; Rs 54,685 cr corpus; Godavarman case
Aerial SeedingOngoingState Forest DeptsDrones/aircraft for inaccessible terrain; Uttarakhand post-fire; Low germination rate
National Bamboo Mission (Restructured)2018-19Min. of Agriculture (NOT MoEFCC!)Hub-spoke model; 2017 IFA amendment (bamboo not “tree” outside forest); 60:40 funding; 1,54,670 sq km bamboo area
Green India Mission (GIM)2014MoEFCC (NAPCC Mission 6)10 mha treatment; NAP merged into GIM; Revised 2021-30 plan (June 2025); 75:25 funding; 11.22 mha covered 2015-21
Van Sanrakshan Adhiniyam2023ParliamentFCA 1980 renamed; Scope clarified; 100 km border exemption; SC direction 2024 to follow Godavarman
Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam5 June 2024PM Modi / MoEFCCWED 2024; 1 billion trees globally; “Plant a tree for your mother”; NDC alignment
Nagar Van Yojana2020MoEFCC600 urban forests + 400 urban gardens by 2024-25; Urban green cover
Joint Forest Management (JFM)1990 (circular)MoEFCC + States1.18 lakh JFMCs; 22+ mha; World’s largest JFM system; NFP 1988 mandate

⭐ Master Cheat Sheet — National Forest Policy & Afforestation

  • NFP 1988: Est. 1988 | Target 33% total, 67% hills | Principal aim: ecological stability NOT revenue | JFM mandate
  • Draft NFP 2018: Released March 2018 | Still a draft, not adopted | Production forestry concern | PPP for afforestation
  • NAP: 2002 | NAEB | 60:40 (90:10 NE) | 3-tier: SFDA→FDA→JFMCs | Merged into GIM
  • CAMPA: SC ordered 2002 | Established 2004 | CAF Act 2016, Rules 2018 | National 10%, States 90% | NPV Rs 9.5–16 lakh/ha | Corpus: Rs 54,685 crore
  • Aerial Seeding: Aircraft/drones | Uttarakhand post-fire | Low germination = challenge | Drones now used for precision
  • NBM (Restructured): 2018-19 | Ministry of Agriculture (NOT MoEFCC — UPSC trap!) | Hub-spoke | 60:40 | 2017 IFA amendment removed bamboo from “tree” definition outside forests
  • GIM: NAPCC Mission 6 | Launched 2014 | 10 mha treatment | 75:25 | NAP merged | Revised June 2025 (Aravalli Green Wall ₹16,053 cr)
  • VSA 2023: FCA 1980 renamed to Van Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan Adhiniyam | Clarified scope | 100 km border exemption | SC 2024: states must follow Godavarman definition
  • Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam: 5 June 2024 | PM Modi | World Environment Day 2024 | 1 billion trees | “Plant 4 Mother”
  • Nagar Van Yojana: 2020 | 600 Nagar Vans + 400 Nagar Vatikas by 2024-25
  • JFM: 1990 circular | 1.18 lakh JFMCs | 22+ million ha | World’s largest JFM

🧪 Practice MCQs — Test Yourself
PYQUPSC 2020
Q1. Consider the following statements: 1. The National Forest Policy 1988 envisages that 33% of India’s total land area should be under forest and tree cover. 2. The principal aim of the National Forest Policy 1988 is the derivation of direct economic benefit from forests. 3. The NFP 1988 mandates that the requirements of industrial timber should be met from farm/social forestry rather than from natural forests. Which are CORRECT?
✅ Official Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only
1 ✅: NFP 1988 sets the target of 33% of India’s total geographical area under forest/tree cover (67% for hills). Correct. 2 ❌ Wrong: The NFP 1988 explicitly states the OPPOSITE — “the derivation of direct economic benefit must be subordinate to the principal aim.” The principal aim is environmental stability and maintenance of ecological balance. This reversal from earlier policies was the revolutionary aspect of NFP 1988. 3 ✅: NFP 1988 says industry’s demand for timber, pulpwood, and other forest produce should be met from farm forestry, social forestry, and agroforestry — NOT from natural forests, which should be preserved for ecology. This is why India has promoted agroforestry and TOF (Trees Outside Forests) as the primary timber source.
Practice
Q2. The National Bamboo Mission (NBM), restructured in 2018-19, is implemented under which Ministry?
✅ Answer: (b) Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare
This is one of UPSC’s most common trap questions about the Bamboo Mission. The restructured NBM (2018-19) is under the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare — NOT MoEFCC. Why? Because the policy reframed bamboo as an agricultural/farmer crop rather than a forest resource — especially after the Indian Forest Act 1927 was amended in 2017 to remove bamboo grown outside forests from the definition of “tree,” allowing farmers to cultivate and harvest it freely. The original NBM (2006-07) was under MoEFCC. This shift to the Agriculture Ministry reflects the new farmer-centric approach to bamboo development.
Practice
Q3. Consider the following about CAMPA: 1. CAMPA was ordered by the Supreme Court in the T.N. Godavarman case. 2. The CAF Act 2016 divides funds 10% to National Fund and 90% to State Funds. 3. NPV rates for diverted forest land range between Rs 9.5 lakh and Rs 16 lakh per hectare. 4. CAMPA funds can be used for administrative salaries of forest officials. Select the correct answer:
✅ Answer: (c) 1, 2 and 3 only
1 ✅: CAMPA was ordered by the SC in the Godavarman case (2002) after NGOs petitioned about under-utilisation of compensatory afforestation funds. 2 ✅: CAF Act 2016 — National Fund receives 10%, State Funds receive 90%. States use their funds for afforestation activities. 3 ✅: NPV rates range from Rs 9.5 lakh per hectare (for lower quality forests) to Rs 16 lakh per hectare (for high-quality dense forests) — a sliding scale based on forest quality. 4 ❌ Wrong: CAMPA funds CANNOT be used for administrative expenses like salaries or office equipment. This is a specific restriction under CAF Act 2016 — the money must be spent directly on ecological restoration and conservation activities.
Current Affairs2023
Q4. The Forest (Conservation) Amendment Act 2023 renamed the Forest (Conservation) Act 1980 to: 1. Van (Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan) Adhiniyam, 1980 2. It also exempted strategic projects within 100 km of international borders from forest clearance 3. It was passed in response to the Supreme Court’s Godavarman judgment (1996) Select correct:
✅ Answer: (c) 1 and 2 only
1 ✅: The 2023 amendment renamed the Forest (Conservation) Act 1980 to “Van (Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan) Adhiniyam, 1980” — which translates as “Forest (Conservation and Augmentation) Act.” The new name reflects a dual mandate of conservation AND augmentation (afforestation/restoration). 2 ✅: The 2023 Act exempts strategic projects of national importance within 100 km of India’s international borders (LAC, LoC, International Border) from forest clearance requirements — a major change to facilitate defense infrastructure. 3 ❌ Wrong: The 2023 Amendment was NOT passed in response to the Godavarman judgment — in fact, critics argue it partly DILUTES the Godavarman judgment’s broad definition of forests. The SC in 2024 directed states to continue following the Godavarman definition until forest land identification under the 2023 Act is complete.
Practice
Q5. The Green India Mission (GIM) is one of the eight missions under India’s National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC). Which of the following is NOT correct about GIM?
✅ Answer: (c) — GIM covers wetlands and mangroves, it’s NOT just trees
(c) is INCORRECT (the question asks for what is NOT correct): GIM explicitly goes beyond tree planting to cover multiple ecosystems. GIM focuses on biodiversity, water, biomass, mangroves, wetlands, critical habitats, and more — in addition to forests and trees. It represents a holistic “greening” approach. (a) ✅ Correct: GIM targets increase in forest/tree cover on 5 mha + improve quality of another 5 mha = 10 mha total. (b) ✅ Correct: GIM formally launched in February 2014. (d) ✅ Correct: NAP has been merged into GIM — both under one budgetary head to augment greening efforts.
PYQUPSC 2022
Q6. In India, the “Compensatory Afforestation Fund Rules” (CAMPA) require that whenever forest land is diverted for non-forest purposes, compensatory afforestation is to be done on:
✅ Official Answer: (b)
Under the CAF Act 2016, when forest land is diverted for non-forest use (mining, roads, dams etc.), the project developer must: (1) Provide an equal area of non-forest land for compensatory afforestation — as close as possible to the diverted area; (2) Fund the afforestation of this newly provided land; (3) Also pay the Net Present Value (NPV) of the forests being cleared. Why non-forest land? Because compensatory afforestation on existing forest land would reduce already scarce forest. The law requires non-forest land to be planted. The key challenge (mentioned in criticisms): the “as close as possible” requirement is often violated in practice — land ends up scattered across 20+ different locations far from the original site.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

The priority order in NFP 1988 (Environment > Community > Tribal > Industry) represented a complete reversal from the British-era 1894 policy and even the 1952 policy, both of which treated forests primarily as revenue/timber sources. The 1988 reversal was driven by a simple ecological insight: India’s forests had been severely depleted because industrial and revenue interests always took precedence. Rivers were drying up. Soil erosion was catastrophic. The policy was saying: forests are first and foremost ecological infrastructure. Their role in maintaining water cycles, preventing floods, sequestering carbon, and supporting biodiversity is more valuable than any timber they can produce. The Draft 2018 policy’s emphasis on “production forestry” worries environmentalists because it risks walking back this philosophy — treating forests again as a resource to be exploited rather than an ecosystem to be maintained.
Compensatory afforestation rests on a flawed equivalence: the assumption that a new plantation can replace an old forest. Critics call this greenwashing because: (1) Ecosystem irreplaceability: A 100-year-old forest has soil, mycorrhizal networks, wildlife corridors, genetic diversity, and hydrological functions that a monoculture plantation of 5-year-old eucalyptus trees cannot replicate. (2) Monoculture problem: Companies typically plant single species (teak, eucalyptus, poplar) for commercial value. These have low biodiversity and don’t restore ecological functions. (3) Location mismatch: The new plantation is often in a completely different geographic and ecological zone from the cleared forest — a Western Ghats evergreen forest cleared for a mine is “compensated” by planting teak in Rajasthan. (4) Timeline: No legal deadline for when the compensatory plantation must be established — projects can clear forests immediately while replacement happens slowly or not at all. (5) Legitimisation: By providing a “legal” mechanism to clear forests, CAMPA has arguably made it easier to approve large infrastructure projects through ecologically sensitive areas — legitimising what would otherwise be resisted as pure deforestation.
Before 2017, bamboo was classified as a “tree” under the Indian Forest Act 1927 — even when grown outside forests on private land. This meant a farmer who planted bamboo in her own field needed government permission to harvest it. In practice this was: (1) Bureaucratically impossible for small farmers; (2) Often led to corruption (needing bribes for permits); (3) Made bamboo cultivation economically unviable since you couldn’t monetise what you grew. The result: India, which has the world’s richest bamboo diversity (136 species), was importing bamboo products from China. The 2017 amendment to the Indian Forest Act 1927 removed bamboo grown outside forests from the definition of “tree” — farmers can now grow, harvest, transport, and sell bamboo freely on their own land. Combined with the Restructured NBM (2018-19) which provides subsidies and market linkages, this has been transformative for bamboo as an agricultural crop. India has also begun promoting bamboo as a steel substitute in construction, as an eco-friendly packaging material, and as a component in the textile industry. ISFR 2023 shows bamboo area growing by 5,227 sq km — partly attributed to this policy change.
Legacy IAS — UPSC Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  |  Content verified to 2025. Key current affairs: Van Sanrakshan Adhiniyam 2023 (Aug 2023), Amendment Rules 2025, Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam (5 June 2024), Revised GIM Plan (June 2025), Aravalli Green Wall Project, CAMPA Rules 2025. NBM Advisory Group formation and Bamboo area ISFR 2023 data included.

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