Environment Ministry funds sought for forest management committees

Below is the complete UPSC study note.


Environment Ministry Funds Sought for Forest Management Committees

Community Forest Resource (CFR) Rights & the Forest Rights Act, 2006


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2006 Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act enacted; recognised historical rights of STs and OTFDs. [S2][S4]
2008 Forest Rights Rules notified; provided for constitution of Forest Rights Committees (FRC) by gram sabhas to receive, verify, and map claims. [S6]
2012 MoEFCC circular clarifying CFR rights vis-à-vis protected areas.
2023 MoTA issued CFR management guidelines — mandated setting up of dedicated CFR management committees under gram sabhas; required preparation of conservation and management plans. [S1]
2025 (May) Total claims filed: 51,23,104 (49,11,495 individual + 2,11,609 community); titles distributed: 25,11,375 (23,89,670 individual + 1,21,705 community). [S4]
2025–26 MoTA seeks MoEFCC funds for operational costs of CFR committees. [S1][S3]

Predecessors / related initiatives: - Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan (DA-JGUA): MoTA scheme providing support for gram sabha strengthening and CFR management plan preparation. [S2] - Van Dhan Vikas Kendras and TRIFED programmes — parallel tribal forest livelihood initiatives. - India's REDD+ framework (MoEFCC) recognises community forest management as a carbon-accounting category. [S7]


4. Core Static Facts

The Forest Rights Act, 2006 - Full title: Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006 - Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Tribal Affairs - Enforced from: 1 January 2008 (rules notified) - Beneficiaries: (a) Scheduled Tribes residing in forests; (b) Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (OTFD) — persons who have depended on forests for 75 years prior to 13 December 2005 [S4] - Rights recognised: Individual Forest Rights (IFR); Community Forest Rights (CFR); Community Forest Resource Rights (CFR-R) [S2][S4]

Community Forest Resource (CFR) Rights - Gram sabhas entitled to CFR rights over areas they have been "traditionally protecting, regenerating, conserving and managing for sustainable use" [S1] - CFR management committees — sub-bodies under the title-holding gram sabha, mandated by 2023 MoTA guidelines [S1] - Must prepare conservation and management plans [S1]

Implementation Data (as on 31 May 2025) [S4] - Total claims filed at gram sabha level: 51,23,104 - Individual claims: 49,11,495 | Community claims: 2,11,609 - Titles distributed: 25,11,375 (49.02% of filed claims) - Individual titles: 23,89,670 - Community titles: 1,21,705

Institutional Structure - Gram Sabha — primary decision-making body for FRA - Forest Rights Committee (FRC) — constituted by gram sabha; assists in claim processing (Forest Rights Rules, 2008) [S6] - CFR management committee — mandated by MoTA 2023 guidelines; manages CFR areas post-title [S1] - FRA Cells — dedicated cells at state and district/sub-division level under DA-JGUA [S2]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental

Social / Tribal

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Economic


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Forest Rights Act was enacted in 2006 and came into force in 2008 (rules notified). [S4]
  2. Full name: Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006. [S4]
  3. Nodal/implementing ministry for FRA: Ministry of Tribal Affairs (not MoEFCC). [S1][S4]
  4. Gram Sabha is the primary authority for receiving, verifying, and recommending FRA claims. [S6]
  5. Forest Rights Committee (FRC) is constituted by the gram sabha (not by the government) to assist in claim processing. [S6]
  6. CFR rights cover areas gram sabhas have been "traditionally protecting, regenerating, conserving and managing for sustainable use." [S1]
  7. As of 31 May 2025: total FRA claims filed = 51,23,104; total titles distributed = 25,11,375 (~49%). [S4]
  8. Community (CFR) titles distributed as of May 2025: 1,21,705. [S4]
  9. 2023 MoTA guidelines mandated setting up CFR management committees under title-holding gram sabhas. [S1]
  10. OTFD (Other Traditional Forest Dwellers) must prove 75 years of forest dependence prior to 13 December 2005 for FRA eligibility. [S4]
  11. Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan (DA-JGUA): MoTA scheme that funds FRA cells at state/district level and CFR management plan preparation. [S2]
  12. FRA is linked to Fifth Schedule of the Constitution and PESA, 1996 in the context of tribal self-governance. [S4]
  13. CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority) is a potential MoEFCC funding channel for forest management — sometimes confused with CFR funding. [S1]
  14. The Orissa Mining Corporation v. MoEF (2013) Supreme Court ruling affirmed mandatory gram sabha consent before diversion of forest land in tribal areas.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Government policies for protection & welfare of vulnerable sections; Statutory bodies; Federalism
GS-III Environment & Ecology; Conservation; Forests; Biodiversity
GS-I Salient features of Indian Society; Tribals & their issues

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Forest Rights Act, 2006 recognises community forest resource rights, yet implementation remains stalled. Examine the structural and institutional reasons for this gap and suggest reforms." (GS-II/III, 250 words)

  2. "Critically analyse the role of gram sabhas as conservation institutions under the Forest Rights Act, 2006. How can the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change strengthen community-led forest governance?" (GS-II/III, 250 words)

  3. "India's NDCs and forest conservation goals cannot be achieved without operationalising community forest resource management. Discuss with reference to recent inter-ministerial developments." (GS-III, 150 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PESA, 1996 Parallel law on gram sabha powers in Scheduled Areas; overlaps with FRA in tribal forest governance
Fifth Schedule & Sixth Schedule Constitutional basis for tribal administration; FRA rights derive legitimacy from these
CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund) Potential MoEFCC funding source for forest management; controversy over diverting tribal forests
India's NDCs & Forest Cover Targets CFR communities are front-line actors for India's 33% forest cover goal under Paris Agreement
Biodiversity Act, 2002 & Biological Diversity Rules Community biodiversity registers and CFR areas overlap; both empower gram sabhas
REDD+ & Carbon Markets in India Community-managed forests are REDD+ eligible; underfunded CFR committees weaken India's position
Van Dhan Vikas Kendras / TRIFED Tribal livelihood schemes dependent on NTFP access rights under FRA
Samatha Judgment (1997) & Orissa Mining Case (2013) Judicial precedents on tribal forest rights and gram sabha supremacy

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong nodal ministry: Aspirants often assume MoEFCC implements FRA — it is MoTA. MoEFCC manages forest land but FRA rights flow through MoTA.

  2. FRC vs. CFR committee confusion: The Forest Rights Committee (FRC) is constituted by gram sabha for claim processing (Forest Rights Rules, 2008). The CFR management committee is a post-title operational body mandated by 2023 MoTA guidelines — these are distinct bodies.

  3. IFR vs. CFR vs. CFR-R: Three distinct categories — Individual Forest Rights (homestead/cultivation), Community Forest Rights (community use), and Community Forest Resource Rights (management over traditional conservation areas). Do not conflate them.

  4. 75-year residency rule applies only to OTFDs, not to Scheduled Tribes — STs need only prove residence and dependence, without the 75-year threshold.

  5. DA-JGUA is not the same as FRA — it is a broader tribal development scheme that includes FRA implementation support but covers many other interventions; do not cite it as the FRA's funding mechanism.


11. Sources


Note: The article excerpt (S1) is paywalled; all other facts are grounded in PIB (Tier 1) and MoEFCC (Tier 1) sources retrieved directly.