Yadav reviews Sloth Bear project, plans rhino, pygmy hog push
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav on Thursday, 9 July 2026, chaired the 91st meeting of the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife (SC-NBWL) at the Centre for Advanced Studies in Forestry (CASFoS), Coimbatore, where progress on Project Sloth Bear was reviewed and fresh conservation commitments were announced for grassland species including the Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros and the Pygmy Hog.
Context
Yadav posted on X that the meeting reviewed Project Sloth Bear and discussed 'conservation issues concerning grassland species, particularly those found in the Brahmaputra and Duar–Terai landscapes.' The minister confirmed that a dedicated project for rhino conservation 'will be launched soon' with assistance from National CAMPA in the species' range states, and that the Pygmy Hog will be included in the list of critically endangered species under the CSS-IDWH scheme to receive focused support.
The Brahmaputra–Duar Terai landscape, spanning Assam and neighbouring northeastern states, is one of India's most biodiverse grassland and floodplain ecosystems. It is the last stronghold of both the Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros and the Pygmy Hog, the world's smallest and one of its most threatened wild pigs.
Policy Backdrop
The SC-NBWL is a statutory advisory body constituted under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, and has conducted numbered project reviews since the early 2000s. Its clearances and recommendations carry significant weight in directing central funding and state-level action on wildlife matters.
National CAMPA — the authority managing the Compensatory Afforestation Fund — was institutionalised following a Supreme Court order in 2009, channelling payments from user agencies that divert forest land into afforestation and wildlife habitat works. The CSS-IDWH (Centrally Sponsored Scheme for Integrated Development of Wildlife Habitats) was restructured in 2008-09 to include a dedicated component for the recovery of critically endangered species, making it the primary vehicle for species-specific conservation funding beyond Project Tiger and Project Elephant.
Rhino conservation in Assam has received sustained central support since the Indian Rhino Vision 2020 programme was launched in 2005, which aimed to increase the rhino population across multiple protected areas. The forthcoming dedicated project would mark a structural escalation of that commitment.
Stakeholders and Impact
The announcements directly affect northeast India's forest departments, particularly those in Assam, West Bengal, and Arunachal Pradesh — the principal range states for both species — who will be responsible for implementing the new rhino project once formally notified. Grassland conservation organisations and wildlife researchers working in the Terai arc have long advocated for greater institutional attention to non-tiger grassland species.
The Pygmy Hog's inclusion in the CSS-IDWH critically endangered species list is significant: it would unlock scheme funding for habitat restoration, captive breeding support, and reintroduction efforts managed by specialised conservation programmes. The species was once considered extinct before a small population was rediscovered in Manas National Park in the 1970s, and captive breeding has since produced animals for reintroduction.
What's Next
The formal launch notification for the dedicated rhino conservation project in range states and a gazette notification adding the Pygmy Hog to the CSS-IDWH priority list are the immediate milestones to watch. Subsequent SC-NBWL agenda items are expected to track implementation progress on both fronts.
India's expanding flagship species model — from Project Tiger (1973) and Project Elephant (1992) to Project Sloth Bear and now a prospective rhino project — signals a broadening of the country's species-centric conservation architecture, increasingly backed by CAMPA funds alongside traditional budgetary allocations. The 91st SC-NBWL meeting suggests this model is being extended deeper into grassland ecosystems that have historically received less institutional attention than forest habitats.