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Global Wetland Outlook 2025

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: GWO

Context: The Global Wetland Outlook 2025, released by the Ramsar Convention, warns of accelerating wetland degradation worldwide, with over 35% lost since 1970, threatening biodiversity and climate resilience.

About Global Wetland Outlook 2025:

What Are Wetlands?

Definition: Wetlands are ecosystems where land is covered by water (permanently or seasonally), supporting unique biodiversity.

Types: Include marshes, swamps, bogs, peatlands, mangroves, and estuaries.

Characteristics: High water saturation Unique soil types like hydric soils Vegetation like reeds, grasses, or mangroves Transition zones between terrestrial and aquatic systems

• High water saturation

• Unique soil types like hydric soils

• Vegetation like reeds, grasses, or mangroves

• Transition zones between terrestrial and aquatic systems

Key Data from Global Wetland Outlook 2025:

Loss Rate: Wetlands are vanishing 3x faster than forests; over 35% lost since 1970.

Biodiversity Decline: Populations of wetland species fell by over 80% between 1970–2022.

Carbon Sink: Peatlands cover just 3% of Earth’s surface but store 30% of global soil carbon.

Agricultural Stress: Nearly 50% of wetlands degraded due to agriculture and water extraction.

India Insight: India has 19 Ramsar sites facing ecological stress, notably Keoladeo National Park and Chilika Lake.

Analysis – Opportunities & Concerns:

Positives:

Biodiversity Hotspots: Wetlands like Loktak Lake and Sundarbans are lifelines for migratory birds, fish, and endangered species.

Flood Regulation: Acts as natural sponges, reducing flood impact during heavy monsoons (e.g., Kolleru in Andhra Pradesh).

Carbon Sequestration: Peatlands are efficient carbon sinks, supporting India’s net-zero targets.

Livelihood Source: Supports 1 billion people globally—through fishing, agriculture, and tourism.

Challenges:

Policy Fragmentation: Wetlands fall under multiple ministries, leading to poor coordination.

Illegal Encroachments: Urban wetlands like Bengaluru’s Bellandur Lake face degradation due to encroachments and pollution.

Data Deficiency: Lack of updated national wetland inventory; last comprehensive mapping done a decade ago.

Climate Risk: Rising temperatures and erratic rainfall patterns worsen wetland drying and salinisation.

Overuse of Water Resources: Wetlands in Ganga plains face decline due to groundwater overextraction.

Recommendations:

Unified Wetland Authority: Establish a centralised agency under MoEFCC for wetland governance.

Revise Wetland Rules 2017: Include smaller urban and seasonal wetlands under legal protection.

Incentivise Conservation: Use carbon credit mechanisms to reward local communities.

Improve Mapping & Monitoring: Use AI-based remote sensing and satellite imagery for real-time wetland status.

Mainstream into Climate Plans: Integrate wetlands in state climate action plans (e.g., Kerala’s Blue Carbon pilot).

Community-Based Models: Adopt Wetland Mitras or eco-clubs in schools for monitoring and awareness

Conclusion:

Wetlands are not wastelands but ecological powerhouses critical to climate resilience, biodiversity, and livelihood security. Protecting them is essential for achieving SDG-13, SDG-15, and India’s net-zero 2070 vision.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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