Close Menu
Business Voice NowBusiness Voice Now
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Business Voice NowBusiness Voice Now
    Subscribe
    • Markets
      • BFSI
      • Capital Goods
    • Business
      • FMCG
      • Retail
      • Quick Commerce
      • Startups
    • Healthcare
    • Technology
    • Auto
    • Real Estate
    • Energy
    • Voices
      • Entrepreneur – CXO Stories
      • Corporate Office story
    • E Magazine
      • Year 2026
        • July 2026
    Business Voice NowBusiness Voice Now
    Home»National»No Land In India Is Truly Waste: ATREE-CPD Convened National Panel Demands Urgent Reclassification Of India’s Wastelands Worth Inr 5-7 Lakh Crores Annually
    National

    No Land In India Is Truly Waste: ATREE-CPD Convened National Panel Demands Urgent Reclassification Of India’s Wastelands Worth Inr 5-7 Lakh Crores Annually

    Pawan sharmaBy Pawan sharmaNovember 21, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard Threads
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    On screen (clockwise): Kunal Satyarthi (IFS, Joint Secretary, MoRD), Aniruddh Sheth (CEP), From (L-R): Subrata Singh (FES), Manish Parmar (ISRO-SAC), Archana Chatterjee (IUCN/FLR), Purnendu Kavoori (CSE), Dr. Abi T. Vanak, Director, CPD-ATREE

    Expert consensus (Union Ministry of Rural Development, Centre for Pastoralism, Foundation for Ecological Security, ISRO-Space Applications Centre, IUCN/Forest Landscape Restoration, Centre for Social Ecology, and ATREE-CPD): Colonial-era “wasteland” categorisation threatens biodiversity, pastoral livelihoods, and India’s global climate commitments

    New Delhi [India], November 21: A high-level panel convened by the WestBridge-supported Centre for Policy Design (CPD) at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE), called for an urgent reclassification of India’s wastelands, stating that properly classifying and managing grasslands, wetlands, pastures, and commons, including Orans, Gochar lands, could unlock significant ecological and economic value.

    The panel was a part of the 9th India Land Development Conference (ILDC) that brought together leading policymakers, researchers, practitioners, and civil society leaders for an evidence-driven dialogue on land governance and ecological transition. The session, titled “Reimagining ‘Wastelands’ of India: Policy Discussions for Arid Commons,” featured prominent voices including Kunal Satyarthi (IFS, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Rural Development, GoI), Manish Parmar (ISRO-Space Applications Centre), Aniruddh Sheth (Centre for Pastoralism), Subrat Singh (Foundation for Ecological Security), Archana Chatterjee (IUCN/Forest Landscape Restoration), and Dr. Purnendu Kavoori (Centre for Social Ecology). The panel set out to understand how grasslands, pastures, wetlands, grazing lands, and village commons, open natural ecosystems that sustain livelihoods and biodiversity, can be mapped, reclassified and re-evaluated under India’s land administration framework.

    Speaking about the environmental and economic importance of these ecosystems, panel moderator, Dr. Abi T. Vanak, Director, Centre for Policy Design, ATREE said, “The term ‘wastelands’ is a misnomer. It implies that land so designated is unutilised and hence is meant to be developed or turned into plantations. Actually, many such land parcels, including grasslands, savannahs, semi-arid lands, deserts, and wetlands, are biodiversity hotspots that sequester carbon dioxide and are critical to rural economies. Village commons that provide services worth INR 5-7 lakh crore per year, need to be properly recorded and managed. Instead of looking at them as free-for-construction/tree plantation sites, their potential to drive rural economies and accommodate the mobility and dynamic adaptations of pastoral communities”

    While reserved forests, sanctuaries, and national parks have clear ownership, management plans, and protection mechanisms, ‘wastelands’ have ambiguous tenure and ownership remains contested. Less than 5% of Open Natural Ecosystems (ONEs) fall under India’s Protected Areas Network, and about 70% of ONEs fall under the wasteland classification.

    Speakers highlighted that this outdated classification has far-reaching consequences. Ambiguous tenure allows commons to be diverted for infrastructure projects under the guise of “unused land,” while productive grasslands are frequently planted over through compensatory afforestation due to flawed categorisation.

    Kunal Satyarthi, IFS, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India, commented on the need for better management of open natural ecosystems and village commons. He explained that since commons fall between departments, categories, and data systems, they are often overlooked in policy matters. He stressed the need for an integrated governance approach that would treat these landscapes as part of a living, interdependent system. In addition, recognising mobility, seasonality, and shared use as legitimate forms of land management would enable smarter, fairer, and more future-ready decisions.

    The panel presented a set of concrete proposals. A harmonised national mapping portal integrating satellite data, pastoralist movement patterns, and seasonal land-use was deemed essential for accurate classification. Pastoralist mapping efforts underway in several states demonstrate that these landscapes generate economic value of up to ₹1.3 lakh crore annually—evidence that grassroots-dependent lands are anything but “waste.”

    International frameworks were cited as powerful levers for change. India’s Land Degradation Neutrality commitments, its pledges under the Bonn Challenge and Convention on Biological Diversity’s 30×30 target, and its climate NDCs can all be advanced more effectively by protecting, restoring, and correctly classifying commons. Recognising these landscapes as OECMs (Other Effective area-based Conservation Measures) and capturing their ecosystem services, valued at US$90–110 billion annually, would strengthen both ecological and development outcomes.

    The discussion concluded with a shared call to action: India must create a unified, publicly accessible National Atlas covering all types of land use, integrating accurate tenure, use, and seasonal data for grasslands, wetlands, pastures, and other commons, providing a single source of truth to guide infrastructure siting, inform afforestation planning, and prevent illegal diversion.

    India is losing irreplaceable landscapes to systemic misclassification, and unless this is corrected at both the revenue and policy levels, the country will continue to see its most biodiverse, livelihood-critical ecosystems replaced by unsuitable development patterns and ineffective afforestation efforts.

    If you object to the content of this press release, please notify us at pr.error.rectification@gmail.com. We will respond and rectify the situation within 24 hours.

    national
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Pawan sharma
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Adhiraj Broghar LLP Marks a Significant Milestone with Bhoomi Pujan Ceremony in Dholera SIR

    July 13, 2026

    Creators Summit – SIBA 2026 Gujarat Edition 5.0 Celebrates the Rise of India’s Creator Economy; WedIQ Unveils Groundbreaking Wedding Innovations

    July 11, 2026

    Dr. Arpit Chopra Jain Honoured on National Doctors’ Day at Fit India Conclave 2026, Recognized as Panel Speaker and BRICS Homeopathic Representative

    July 9, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Recent Post
    • Ahead of MILT Congress 2026, Global Industry Leaders Reveal the Trends Reshaping MICE and Luxury Travel
    • Analytics Insight Unveils ‘40 Under 40’ July 2026 Special Edition Celebrating Emerging AI and Technology Leaders
    • The Next-Generation Industrial Leader: How Zahra Deesawala Is Balancing Boardroom Strategy with International Sporting Excellence
    • MVK Agro’s Rs. 275 Crore Expansion; Company Targets Rs. 650-700 Crore Revenue Run-Rate by FY28 – Angel One
    • Ratul Puri on Building Integrated Energy Solutions for India’s Rising Power Demand
    • Rawbare Secures Strategic Investment from Teamology to Fuel Next Growth Phase
    • From Folklore to Futuristic Fantasy: Dr. Rajkumar Kishor Reimagines a Manipuri Legend in Keibukeioiba – When the Forest Wakes
    • From Gujarat to Glory: Ajay’s Cafe Wins Two Awards, Emerges as India’s Fastest-Rising Café Brand

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.