India’s National Red List Assessment of Indian Flora and Fauna (2025)

Why in News?

India has launched a National Red List Assessment — the first-ever nationwide survey to assess the extinction risk of nearly 11,000 species of plants and animals. The exercise aims to provide a science-based, accurate national inventory of species and their conservation status.

Description:

FeatureDetails
Name of the InitiativeNational Red List Assessment of Indian Flora and Fauna
Launched byMinistry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC)
Implemented byZoological Survey of India (ZSI) and Botanical Survey of India (BSI)
Total Species to be AssessedAround 11,000 species (plants + animals)
DurationUp to 2030
FundingEntirely publicly funded (budget: ₹95 crore)
Model UsedIUCN Red List methodology (international standard)
GoalTo publish National Red Data Books on flora and fauna by 2030
AssessorsCreation of a pool of 300 certified Red List assessors in India
Lead Official (2025)Kirtivardhan Singh, MoS Environment
Associated ConventionConvention on Biological Diversity (CBD)
Global Framework AlignmentKunming–Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (KM-GBF)
Announcement VenueIUCN World Conservation Congress, Abu Dhabi (2025)

Objectives of the Project:

  • Develop an indigenous Red Listing System following IUCN standards.
  • Assess the vulnerability and extinction risk of Indian species.
  • Support biodiversity conservation planning and policy formulation.
  • Build national expertise in species risk assessment.
  • Publish India’s National Red Data Books (by 2030).

What is a “Red List Survey”?

  • A systematic study to evaluate each species based on:
    • Population trends
    • Habitat range
    • Threat factors (habitat loss, climate change, poaching, pollution, etc.)
    • Conservation measures in place
  • Uses quantitative criteria identical to those of the IUCN Red List, ensuring global comparability.

Why This Matters for India?

  • India is a megadiverse country, home to ~7–8% of all recorded species globally.
  • Until now, the country depended mainly on IUCN global data or Wildlife Protection Act schedules, not a nationally verified extinction-risk list.
  • The National Red List will:
    • Fill data gaps on Indian species.
    • Help prioritize conservation and funding.
    • Guide environmental clearances & biodiversity impact assessments.
    • Strengthen India’s reporting under CBD & Global Biodiversity Targets.

Expected Outcomes by 2030:

  • Publication of National Red Data Books (Flora + Fauna).
  • Creation of central biodiversity database for India.
  • Enhanced capacity building — 300 certified experts.
  • Better integration of biodiversity data into policy & planning.
  • Alignment with Kunming–Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (Goal A & B) on species protection.

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