The Hindu - International

What are the new Green Credit Programme rules?

Who will carry out a orestation measures? What will States need to do? Can companies trade ‘green credits’?

- Jacob Koshy

The story so far: n April 12, the Environmen­t Ministry issued further guidelines on its Green Credit Programme (GCP), two months after it had prescribed rules governing the rst initiative, a orestation. Modifying the rules, an o€cial said, will prioritise the restoratio­n of ecosystems over mere planting of trees.

OWhat is the Green Credit Programme?

This programme was o€cially unveiled in October 2023 and has its provenance in Mission Life, a principle frequently articulate­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Its goal is to lay an emphasis on sustainabi­lity, reduce waste and improve the natural environmen­t. The GCP programme presents itself as an “innovative, market-based mechanism” to incentivis­e “voluntary actions” for environmen­tal conservati­on, according to a document of the Environmen­t Ministry. Under this, individual­s, organisati­ons and companies — public and private — would be encouraged to invest in sectors ranging from a orestation, water conservati­on, stemming air-pollution, waste management, mangrove conservati­on and in return be eligible to receive ‘green credits.’ An autonomous body of the Ministry, the Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education (ICFRE), is in charge of administer­ing the programme. They will dene methodolog­ies to calculate ‘green credits’ that result from the activities prescribed. They will also manage a trading platform whereby such credits could be traded.

In February, the Ministry prescribed the rules governing the rst of these initiative­s — a orestation. Broadly, companies, organisati­on and individual­s could o er to pay for a orestation projects in specic tracts of degraded forest and wasteland. It said, the actual tree planting would be carried out by the State forest department­s. Two years after planting and following an evaluation by the ICFRE, each such planted tree could be worth one ‘green credit.’ So far, The Hindu has learnt that forest department­s of 13 States have o ered 387 land parcels of degraded forest land, worth nearly 10,983 hectares. Those who are successful in fullling the criteria will be given an estimate of the costs involved in a orestation. Public sector companies such as Indian Oil, Power Grid Corporatio­n of India, the National Thermal Power Corporatio­n, Oil India, Coal India, National Hydropower Corporatio­n have reportedly registered to invest in the programme, a Ministry o€cial conrmed.

In fresh guidelines on how to restore a degraded forest landscape, the Environmen­t Ministry has claried that preference would be given to indigenous species

Why has the GCP stoked controvers­y?

The GCP has not become operationa­l but critics have questioned multiple aspects of it. The rst is that it makes a commodity out of environmen­tal conservati­on. India’s forest conservati­on laws oblige any industry, that is allowed to raze forests and use that land for non-forestry purposes, to provide an equivalent amount of non-forest land to forest authoritie­s and pay them to a orest that land.

The GCP programme for a orestation says that companies can “exchange” their credits for “complying with compensato­ry a orestation”. This could be a way, critics say, to ease forest diversion requiremen­ts for mining and infrastruc­ture companies. Secondly, planting trees does not automatica­lly boost ecosystems. India has about 200 types of forests. Some are grasslands, some are dominated by shrubs and there have been studies to show that planting the wrong types of trees could fester invasive species or prevent a sustainabl­e ecosystem. There is also a threat that natural forests could be razed and invasive monocultur­es promoted. Finally, the GCP also says that green credits that result in storing carbon (from trees) may be used for carbon trading. This again is controvers­ial as the math equating these activities is not clear.

How has the government responded?

In its latest update, the Ministry has issued the guidelines that States must rely on to calculate what it would cost to restore a degraded forest landscape. The Ministry has tweaked an earlier requiremen­t that there be a minimum of 1,100 trees per hectare to qualify as a reforested landscape and left it to States to specify them. “Not all degraded forests can support that kind of density. Thus, in some places shrubs, herbs and grasses may be suitable for restoring the ecosystem,” Nameeta Prasad, Joint Secretary, in the Environmen­t Ministry told The Hindu. Preference would be given to indigenous species. The programme was currently in a “pilot project” mode and questions such as how shrubs and grasses could be quantied in terms of green credits were still being worked out, she added. Moreover, companies would not be able to o set all their obligation­s under compensato­ry a orestation using green credits, but could claim a portion of it, she claried.

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