Brief Context
In News India has officially launched its National Red List Roadmap and Vision 2025–2030 at the IUCN World Conservation Congress 2025, marking a transformative step in species assessment and conservation planning. National Red List Roadmap and Vision 2025–2030 It envisions publishing Red Data Books for both flora and fauna, providing authoritative documentation of threatened species. It is developed by the Zoological Survey of India (ZSI), Botanical Survey of India (BSI), IUCN India, and the Cen
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Syllabus:GS3/Environment
In News
- India has officially launched its National Red List Roadmap and Vision 2025–2030 at the IUCN World Conservation Congress 2025, marking a transformative step in species assessment and conservation planning.
National Red List Roadmap and Vision 2025–2030
- It envisions publishing Red Data Books for both flora and fauna, providing authoritative documentation of threatened species.
- It is developed by the Zoological Survey of India (ZSI), Botanical Survey of India (BSI), IUCN India, and the Centre for Species Survival.
- India aims to publish National Red Data Books for both flora and fauna by 2030.
- Key Features
- It will assess nearly 11,000 species of plants and animals by 2030, including terrestrial and marine biodiversity
- It adheres to IUCN Red List protocols and supports India’s commitments under the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
- It includes a centralized digital platform for data collection, monitoring, and public access to conservation status.
Relevance for India
- India, one of the world’s 17 megadiverse countries, is home to four of the 36 global biodiversity hotspots, the Himalayas, Western Ghats, Indo-Burma, and Sundaland.
- It occupies just 2.4% of the world’s land area and it harbours nearly 8% of global flora and 7.5% of global fauna, with over 28% of plants and 30% of animals being endemic.
- The Red List Roadmap fills this gap by providing baseline data, threat analysis, and conservation priorities essential for policy-making and resource allocation
- It aims to establish a nationally coordinated, science-based framework to assess the extinction risk of India’s flora and fauna.
Challenges Ahead
- Many species, especially in remote ecosystems, remain undocumented or poorly studied.
- Effective implementation requires seamless collaboration across central and state departments, research institutions, and local communities which can be difficult.
- Sustained financial and technical support is needed to train personnel, conduct field surveys, and maintain digital infrastructure.
- Infrastructure projects often intersect with ecologically sensitive zones, requiring careful policy integration.
Suggestions and Way Forward
- India’s National Red List Roadmap is a strategic effort to protect biodiversity and support global sustainability.
- It focuses on strengthening institutions , involving local communities, integrating data into policy-making, and collaborating with global conservation partners.
- The Red List is expected to become a cornerstone for the country’s future environmental and ecological.
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