The Indian government recently came out with the India State of Forest Report 2021, the biennial national forest cover report, claiming a marginal increase of 2,261 sq km in the country’s total forest and tree cover but unlike the previous years, the sector experts this time are vocal against the claims. They question the methodology with the report that counts even trees in cities and plantations as “forest cover”.

The experts note that the report reflects disconnects within India’s forestry sector – for example, in the report, an area recorded under forest cover, if considered applying the Forest Conservation Act 1980, the area will likely not meet the qualification of a “forest”.

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This further impacts other definitions. For instance, environmental lawyer Ritwick Dutta told Mongabay-India, “If we go by the India State of Forest Report 2021, many of the city dwellers or coffee plantation owners are actually forest dwellers.”

Dutta also highlighted the duality of the forest department (which led the study) and India’s ministry of forests, noting that, the government, “when it comes to Forest Conservation Act 1980, under which land is diverted for non-forest purposes, does not count roadside plantation as forest cover. But suddenly when it comes to these biennial forest cover reports, they decide that such areas are forests”, noted Dutta whose Delhi-based organisation, Legal Initiative for Forests & Environment, recently won the 2021 Right Livelihood Award, which is widely considered the alternative Nobel Prize.

“Now, imagine the area that has been declared under forest cover under this report is neither owned by forest department nor covered under the dictionary meaning of forests or the Forest Conservation Act 1980. In fact, it has been over 20 years but the government is yet to finalise the dictionary meaning of forests in India. A critical analysis of this report highlights the mess that India’s forests are in,” he said while noting that if the government continues with these reports then, in future, “any garden with a good number of trees may be counted as a forest”.

Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya have the highest loss in forest cover, according to the report. Photo credit: Saurabh Sawant/ Wikimedia Commons

Forest decline trend

Prepared by the Forest Survey of India, the India State of Forest Report 2021, which was released by the Indian government’s Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change on January 13, notes that areas with tree patches including “plantations on the private and community lands, road, rail and canal side plantations, rubber, tea and coffee plantations are included in the assessment of forest cover”.

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But even if the claims made in the India State of Forest Report 2021, which is made using remote sensing satellite data, are considered, the biodiversity-rich northeast India and districts with the tribal population (indigenous communities) are consistently losing forests. According to the report, the total forest cover in the northeast region is 1,69, 521 sq km and the region showed a decrease of 1,020 sq km compared to the 2019 report.

In January 2020, when the India State of Forest Report 2019 was released, Mongabay-India had reported that the decline in forest area in northeast India has been an ongoing trend with the region witnessing a loss of about 3,199 sq km of forest area between 2009-2019. This is worrying because India’s northeastern region – Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim and Tripura – is one of the 17 biodiversity hotspots of the world. The region with just 7.98% of the country’s geographical area accounts for nearly 25% of India’s forest cover.

According to the 2021 report, India’s total forest cover is 7,13,789 sq km (21.71% of India’s geographical area) while the tree cover is estimated to be 95,748 sq km (2.91% of India’s geographical area). The latest report said the country’s total forest and tree cover is 8,09,537 sq km. (24.62% of geographical area) shows an increase of 2,261 sq km (0.28%) compared to the 2019 version. The increase in the forest cover, according to the latest report, is 1,540 sq km in and that in tree cover is 721 sq km.

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It said the top five states in terms of increase in forest cover are Andhra Pradesh (647 sq km), Telangana (632 sq km), Odisha (537 sq km), Karnataka (155 sq km) and Jharkhand (110 sq km), while the top five states showing a major loss in forest cover are the five northeastern states – Arunachal Pradesh (257 sq km), Manipur (249 sq km), Nagaland (235 sq km), Mizoram (186 sq km) and Meghalaya (73 sq km).

It also highlighted a decrease of 902 sq km in 140 hill districts of the country.

Kanchi Kohli, an environmental researcher with the Centre for Policy Research, said, “These reports hide more than they reveal.”

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“A state of forest needs to as much about calculating forest lands and trees as it should be about acknowledging that India’s forest cover is a stressed asset. The India State of Forest Report is an assemblage of numbers that neither give a clear sense of the quality of forests and their socioeconomic uses nor a sense of tree cover. Understanding the social life of forests was never a part of the Forest Survey of India’s methodology. But these reports do not even attempt to reflect that forest lands may be empty of trees and lands with tree cover may be a fruit orchard waiting to be farmed,” Kohli told Mongabay-India.

The report is being criticised for considering patches of invasive trees, such as Prosopis juliflora, as forests. Photo credit: P Jeganathan/Wikimedia Commons

Opposition to report

Commenting on the widespread criticism of the India State of Forest Report methodology, Raj Bhagat, a remote sensing expert, told Mongabay-India that the problem is that the areas that are considered forest under the report may not resemble forest at all.

“With the remote sensing technology, even patches of trees in an urban city can get counted under the forest cover,” said Bhagat. “But trees or patches of trees does not mean forests. For me, a forest area needs to be decided on the basis of an ecosystem … there has to be a balance between the use of remote sensing data and checking that data on the ground.”

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For instance, after the India State of Forest Report 2021 was released, Bhagat tweeted a set of images – a Google map image of an area of Delhi and an image from the India State of Forest Report 2021 for the same location – showing how the India State of Forest Report report “classifies most of the trees in roadside and big government plots in New Delhi as moderate dense and open forest”. The area shown in images is mainly Lutyens’ Delhi, a VIP zone in the national capital which is home to top ministers and officials of the Indian government.

“Remote sensing data should be used but should not be used as the only source to define forest cover,” he said. “It can monitor the presence of trees and once the patches of trees are identified, local teams should carry out the survey and then together the data should be interpreted. Otherwise, entire cities including the area around our parliament in Delhi, coconut trees, and coffee/rubber plantations will continue to be counted under forest cover.”

The report also claimed to have mapped the forest cover in seven megacities – Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Ahmedabad, Chennai and Kolkata – where it said the total forest cover is 509.72 sq km, which is about 10.21% of the total geographical areas of the cities. It calculated the decadal change in forest cover of these cities and noted an overall increase of 68 sq km over the last 10 years. This is interesting as India’s megacities are constantly growing in population and the pressure on resources is increasing.

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The report said while there is an increase in forest cover in Hyderabad (48.66 sq km) and Delhi (19.91 sq km), Ahmedabad and Bengaluru have lost forest cover of 8.55 sq km and 4.98 sq km respectively.

MD Madhusudan, an ecologist, publicly commented on the discrepancies in the India State of Forest Report 2021 on the social media platform, Twitter. He highlighted how densely populated areas in India’s cities and areas under coconut trees have been classified as areas under forest cover.

“Despite [the] India State of Forest Report claims of rising forest cover, there is little evidence to show that India’s natural forest cover has actually increased. In fact, it has very likely declined. The purported gains have largely come from the Forest Survey of India’s problematic and perverse redefinition of ‘forest’,” he tweeted.

Remote sensing images of urban green spaces, such as parks and coconut groves, need local surveys to assess their suitability to be considered as forests. Photo credit: Vyacheslav Argenberg/Wikimedia Commons

In his series of tweets, Madhusudan alleged that with such reports claiming the rise in forest cover the authorities can continue diverting (actual) forest areas for energy, infrastructure and industry projects. Mongabay-India has reported on several occasions how precious forest areas, in some cases pristine ones, in the country are diverted for projects despite serious objections irrespective of which political party is in power.

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“Who could be against an increased diversion of forests if it can be shown that forest cover too is increasing?” he tweeted while adding that the rising forest cover also offers bright prospects in global carbon trade, where countries adding forest cover could trade their carbon gains to offset emissions of other countries for money.

Kanchi Kohli said, “A stack of numbers in the India State of Forest Report 2021 is merely an attempt to satisfy domestic policy and international climate offset targets.”

“Anything that beeps as forest cover on the satellite radar satisfies the objectives of the report,” she emphasised. “Both central and state governments are setting themselves up to abandon forests in exchange for investment agreements. At the same time, the record of forest rights continues to navigate the highly compromised post-colonial legacy of forest conservation and marginalised rights.”

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Climate change hotspot

The 2021 report also carried out mapping of climate change hotspots in Indian forests using computer model-based projection of temperature and rainfall data, for the three future time-period – 2030, 2050 and 2085. Climatic hotspots here mainly refer to forests that will be impacted by climate change and experience changes in temperature and rainfall.

It said by 2030 almost 45%-64% of India’s forest cover will fall under climate hotspots while by 2050 entire forest cover of the country is estimated to be covered under climate change hotspots with varying severity. By 2085, it said, 20% of India’s forest cover may experience “catastrophic changes due to adverse impact of climate change”.

The areas that are likely to experience catastrophic effects include territories of Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, northeastern states such as Assam, Manipur, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Tripura and some parts of central India and Gujarat.

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The report also assessed forest cover in the tiger reserves and corridors and lion conservation area of India. It said tiger reserves occupy about 74,710 sq km (about 2.27% of India’s area) and the assessment shows the forest cover in tiger reserves is 55,666 sq km, which is about 74.51% of the total area of tiger reserves and 7.8% of India’s total forest cover.

It said the decadal assessment of forest cover in tiger reserves shows “overall gain in forest cover” in 20 tiger reserves during the past decade while 32 tiger reserves recorded an overall loss of forest cover.

Meanwhile, in the case of lion habitat, a decrease of 33.43 sq km of forest cover was observed in the report in the last decade.

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Ritwick Dutta questioned that when the government of India can claim that they have photographed the majority of the tigers present in India, “why can exhaustive ground-truthing not be carried out for the forest report”?

“Increase of forest and tree cover in some tiger reserves and lion habitat may not entirely be good news,” Dutta said. “It is a case of misplaced priorities. If we want to do such an exercise, we should assess loss of forest cover in elephant habitat and corridors as we regularly see increasing human-elephant conflict due to projects taking away their habitat.”

This article first appeared on Mongabay.