Wednesday, October 30, 2019


Context: US Agency for International Development (USAIDand India’s Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CChave launched Forest-PLUS 2.0.
S USAID 
Launch of 
Forest-PLUS 2.0 
forest for water and prosperity 
Tamarind Halt. India Habitat Centre 
Lodhi Road. New Delhi 
September 25.2019

What is it?
  1. Forest-PLUS is a 5-year programme initiated in December 2018 that focuses on developing tools and techniques to bolster ecosystem management and harnessing ecosystem services in forest landscape management.
  2. It is meant to enhance sustainable forest landscape management after Forest-PLUS completed its five years in 2017.
  3. The programme’s first set focused on capacity building to help India participate in REDD+. It included four pilot projects in Sikkim, Rampur, Shivamogga and Hoshangabad.
  4. Under these, field tests, innovative tools and approaches for Indian forest management were developed.
    1. Promotion of bio-briquettes in Sikkim,
    2. introduction of solar heating systems in Rampur and
    3. development of an agro-forestry model in Hoshangabad were some of the achievements of this programme.
  5. Forest-PLUS 2.0 comprises pilot project in three landscapes — Gaya in Bihar, Thiruvananthapuram in Kerala and Medak in Telangana. The choice of these sites was driven by the contrast in their landscapes – Bihar is a forest deficit area, Telangana is a relatively drier area where there is ample scope for community livelihood enhancement and Kerala is rich in biodiversity.

The targets of this set are:
  1. 1,20,000 hectares of land under improved management.
  2. New, inclusive economic activity worth $12 million.
  3. Measurable benefits accrued to 800,000 households.
  4. Three incentive mechanisms demonstrated in managing landscapes for ecosystem services.

To achieve these targets, the programme has three focal points of action:
  1. Developing tools for multiple services in forests management. The tools consist innovative apps for automating forest planning processes, model forest management plans. These tools are expected to result in enhanced water flow and quality, improved livelihoods and resilience of forest-dependent communities.
  2. Developing incentive-based instruments for leveraging finance. For example, a payment mechanism where a municipality or industry would pay upstream forest communities to use water flowing down because of improved forest management.
  3. Unlocking economic opportunities for forest-dependent people by modelling and setting up conservation enterprises and mobilising investment from the private sector.

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