Back to success stories
14 Aug 2020 | Transboundary Landscapes

India’s first State REDD+ Action Plan launched

70% Complete

Mizoram paves the way for strategic forest conservation across the HKH

India’s first State REDD+ Action Plan launched

Mizoram has the highest forest and tree cover as a percentage of its geographical area (around 88.78%) of any Indian state. These forests are a vital carbon sink for the country. Alarmingly, the state’s forests have experienced severe degradation in recent years.

Recognizing this threat and the opportunities for incentivizing community-based conservation, Mizoram officially endorsed its State REDD+ Action Plan (SRAP) – India’s first – on 17 December 2019. The plan – drafted with support from the Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education (ICFRE), ICIMOD, and GIZ – focuses on increasing forest carbon stocks through results-based payments to communities for forest conservation and by addressing the drivers of deforestation and forest degradation. In March 2020, Mizoram also established the country’s first REDD+ Cell to coordinate and implement REDD+ activities.

SRAPs will contribute to India’s ambitious REDD+ targets. As part of its Nationally Determined Contributions, India has pledged to create an additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent through additional forest and tree cover by 2030. It has also committed to the Bonn Challenge by aiming to restore a 21 million hectares of degraded land by 2030.

Other Indian states and HKH countries have taken a cue from Mizoram. ICFRE and ICIMOD helped Uttarakhand become the second Indian state to draft and endorse its SRAP in 2019 and are in the process of developing such plans for Himachal Pradesh and Sikkim. State-level action plans are also being prepared for other HKH countries such as Nepal and Myanmar.

Mizoram’s forests serve as a carbon sink and are integral to the culture and livelihoods of communities. Their continued conservation is central to India’s REDD+ vision.

Chapter 5

Engaging policy makers

South–south learning in participatory forest management

Nepal’s experiences with community forestry could help Myanmar address deforestation and forest degradation

Navigating the national drought emergency in Afghanistan

Pastoral communities in the western Himalaya drylands are extremely vulnerable to recurrent droughts. Through our SERVIR-HKH ...

Tourism planning at the local level

As Nepal’s gateway to Mount Kailash in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, Namkha Rural Municipality ...

Improving livelihoods and conservation through agroforestry

We are leveraging a public–private–community partnership working with the private sector company Dabur Nepal Pvt. Ltd, ...

Yak across borders

Bhutan gifts breeding bulls to India and Nepal to enhance yak productivity in the Kangchenjunga Landscape

Climate Services Initiative takes shape

Expanding knowledge on and access to climate and weather services

Engaging local-level policymakers in tailoring climate information

A rapidly changing climate and frequent extreme weather events are resulting in disturbances in the largely ...

Immense outstanding universal value within the HKH

Visionary leaders in 1972 established the World Heritage Convention through a General Conference of UNESCO where ...