The United Nations has declared 2026 as the ‘International Year for Rangelands and Pastoralists’, a landmark decision aimed at spotlighting some of the world’s most overlooked yet vital ecosystems. The announcement addresses a critical imbalance in global climate action: while forests receive disproportionate attention and funding, grasslands and savannahs—equally critical for carbon sequestration, biodiversity conservation, and climate resilience—remain marginalized in international climate negotiations and national climate strategies. This UN declaration represents a pivotal moment in rebalancing climate action toward comprehensive ecosystem protection, recognizing that effective climate mitigation requires attention to all biomes, not merely forests.
Key Facts for Competitive Exams and Current Affairs
- UN Declaration: 2026 as International Year for Rangelands and Pastoralists
- Primary Goal: Spotlight overlooked grassland and savannah ecosystems
- Scientific Consensus: Grasslands and savannahs function as carbon sinks
- Policy Gap: UNFCCC climate negotiations remain forest-centric
- 2022 Scientific Push: International scientists urged UNFCCC to broaden climate focus
- Key Publication: Open letter in “Science” journal highlighting grassland carbon sequestration
- COP30 Location: Belém, Brazil (2023)
- Notable Initiative: Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) launched at COP30
- Key UN Convention: UNFCCC (UN Framework Convention on Climate Change)
- Related Convention: UNCCD (UN Convention to Combat Desertification)
- Global Threat: Grasslands among most threatened ecosystems worldwide
Scientific Evidence: Grasslands as Critical Carbon Sinks
The 2022 Scientists’ Appeal
In 2022, international scientists published an open letter in “Science” urging parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) to broaden climate goals beyond forests to encompass all biomes, particularly grasslands and savannahs. The scientists presented compelling evidence that savannahs function as effective carbon sinks, capable of sequestering atmospheric carbon at rates comparable to or exceeding forested ecosystems.
Three Years Later: Policy Lag Continues
Despite this scientific consensus, three years on, UNFCCC climate negotiations continue to prioritize forests, leaving other critical ecosystems—particularly grasslands, savannahs, and rangelands—largely marginalized from mainstream climate strategies and funding mechanisms. This persistent forest-centric focus represents a fundamental misalignment between scientific evidence and policy priorities.
COP30: Emblematic of the Forest-Dominated Agenda
Brazil’s Hosting and Amazon Focus
The UNFCCC COP30 climate talks held in Belém, Brazil, dramatically illustrated this imbalance. With Brazil hosting much of the Amazon basin, forests dominated the negotiating agenda. The launch of the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF), backed by multi-million-dollar commitments, aimed to incentivize forest protection through financial mechanisms and governance frameworks.
Grasslands Left Behind
Yet COP30 ended without a concrete climate roadmap addressing grasslands and rangelands, reinforcing concerns that these ecosystems remain excluded from mainstream climate strategies despite their ecological significance. This oversight perpetuates a cycle where grasslands receive minimal funding, technical support, and policy recognition compared to forest conservation initiatives.
Grasslands Under Multiple Threats
Drivers of Ecosystem Degradation
Grasslands globally face unprecedented pressures from multiple sources:
- Agricultural Conversion: Conversion to agricultural land and plantations destroys native grassland habitats.
- Invasive Species: Non-native species outcompete indigenous flora and alter fire regimes.
- Fossil Fuel Extraction: Mining and energy development fragment grassland ecosystems.
- Fire Suppression Policies: Well-intentioned fire suppression ironically increases catastrophic wildfire risk by allowing dangerous fuel accumulation.
Indigenous Knowledge Marginalization
Indigenous land management practices—such as controlled burning and adaptive grazing strategies—have been systematically sidelined by state-imposed fire suppression policies and conservation models. This marginalization has paradoxically worsened wildfire intensity and carbon emissions, as dangerous fuel loads accumulate rather than being managed through traditional practices.
Regional Case Studies: Global Grassland Crises
Australian Desert Grasslands
Australian desert grasslands stewarded by Indigenous communities face unprecedented climate-induced challenges including:
- Severe droughts
- Destructive flash floods
- Invasive buffel grass that burns with greater intensity than native species
Brazil’s Cerrado Savannah
Brazil’s Cerrado savannah, which supports major river systems, faces higher land-use pressure than the Amazon itself. This critical but underappreciated ecosystem receives minimal protection compared to Amazon forest conservation efforts.
Policy and Global Implications
Integrating Grasslands into Climate Frameworks
Scientists and policymakers have called for integrating grasslands into national climate plans and the Paris Agreement’s nationally determined contributions (NDCs). This integration would ensure that grassland conservation receives equivalent policy priority and financial support as forest protection.
India’s Opportunity and Challenge
In India, grasslands fall under multiple ministries with conflicting mandates, creating governance fragmentation. However, recognizing grasslands as carbon sinks within India’s NDC framework could simultaneously strengthen climate mitigation while supporting pastoral livelihoods—achieving both climate and social objectives.
Coordinated Global Action
Experts emphasize that coordinated action across UN conventions (particularly UNFCCC and UNCCD) and national institutions is essential to mainstream grassland conservation globally and ensure that climate action reflects scientific evidence rather than perpetuating forest-centric biases.


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