Published on: June 22, 2025

REVISED GREEN INDIA MISSION (GIM)

REVISED GREEN INDIA MISSION (GIM)

CONTEXT

  • India faces rising ecological degradation and climate impacts across key ecosystems.
  • Feedback from states and scientific bodies indicated the need for a region-specific, impact-driven roadmap.
  • Revised GIM aligns with India’s international climate commitments, especially under the Paris Agreement.

CONCEPT: GREEN INDIA MISSION (GIM) OVERVIEW

  • Launched in 2014 under National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC).
  • Objectives:
    • Increase forest/tree cover on 5 million hectares.
    • Improve quality of forest cover on another 5 million hectares.
    • Enhance biodiversity, ecosystem services, and forest-based livelihoods.
  • Focus on carbon sequestration, restoring degraded lands, and tackling desertification.
  • Based on ecological vulnerability, restoration potential, and carbon storage mapping.

CURRENT: REVISED GIM HIGHLIGHTS (2025 UPDATE)

  • Geographic Focus: Aravallis, Western Ghats, Himalayas, and mangroves.
  • Aravalli Green Wall:
    • Combat desertification and dust pollution.
    • Covers 8 lakh hectares, spans 29 districts in 4 states, budget of ₹16,053 crore.
    • Buffer zone of 5 km, targeting 6.45 million hectares overall.
  • Western Ghats:
    • Targets afforestation, groundwater recharge, and eco-restoration of mining areas.
  • Carbon Sink Targets:
    • India’s NDC goal: Create 2.5–3 billion tonnes of CO₂ sink by 2030.
    • GIM can potentially expand forest/tree cover to 24.7 million hectares, sequestering 3.39 billion tonnes of CO₂ (FSI estimate).
  • Funding & Implementation:
    • ₹624.71 crore released (2019–24); ₹575.55 crore utilized.
    • States prioritized based on degradation and sequestration potential.
  • Results So Far:
    • 11.22 million hectares covered via afforestation (2015–2021).
    • 2.29 billion tonnes of CO₂ equivalent sequestered (2005–2021).
  • Scientific Insights:
    • Open forest restoration is most cost-effective; potential to sequester 1.89 billion tonnes CO₂ on 15 million hectares.

Strategic Significance

  • Supports India’s commitment to restore 26 million hectares of degraded land by 2030.
  • Boosts climate resilience, ecosystem health, and rural livelihoods.
  • Integrates environmental sustainability with development goals.