A social media video features Supriya Sahu, a senior IAS officer and key figure in Tamil Nadu’s environmental governance framework, speaking about the State government’s decision to notify 100 new reserved forests. The move marks a significant expansion of protected forest areas in Tamil Nadu and reflects the government’s strategy to strengthen biodiversity conservation while advancing climate resilience.
As Additional Chief Secretary for Environment, Climate Change and Forests, Sahu has been closely associated with policy initiatives linking ecosystem protection with long-term sustainability. The notification of 100 reserved forests is intended to safeguard ecologically sensitive landscapes, protect wildlife habitats, enhance carbon sequestration, and preserve critical water sources. In a state increasingly exposed to heat stress, erratic rainfall, and extreme weather events, forest ecosystems are viewed as essential buffers that regulate microclimates, reduce soil erosion, and recharge groundwater systems.
The expansion builds on Tamil Nadu’s broader environmental strategy, which includes climate adaptation planning, ecosystem restoration, and sustainable cooling initiatives. Sahu has received international recognition for her environmental work, including the UN’s “Champions of the Earth” award in 2025 for contributions to sustainable cooling and ecosystem-based approaches. Her policy focus has emphasised nature-based solutions that integrate climate mitigation with biodiversity protection and public health considerations.
According to the Tamil Nadu government’s January 2026 press release, the notification process followed scientific assessment and legal procedures under forest conservation frameworks. Reserved forest status strengthens regulatory protection by restricting land-use change and enabling stricter monitoring against encroachment and degradation. This legal classification provides long-term institutional backing for conservation, rather than relying solely on short-term project-based interventions.
The expansion of protected forests also carries socio-economic implications. Forest-dependent communities rely on ecosystems for livelihoods, non-timber forest produce, and water security. By strengthening conservation measures, the government aims to balance ecological protection with sustainable resource use. The initiative reflects an understanding that climate resilience in Tamil Nadu is closely tied to landscape-level ecological stability.
Sahu’s public communication on the issue highlights a broader shift in environmental governance, where senior administrators increasingly engage directly with citizens to explain policy decisions. By framing forest expansion as both a biodiversity and climate strategy, the initiative connects conservation policy to everyday environmental outcomes such as cleaner air, improved water availability, and reduced heat stress.
The notification of 100 new reserved forests positions Tamil Nadu as one of the states taking proactive steps to integrate conservation into climate planning. It reinforces the growing role of state-level leadership in India’s environmental governance landscape. Through legal protection, ecosystem restoration, and public engagement, the initiative underscores forests as foundational infrastructure for climate resilience and long-term ecological security. (Facebook video, February 2026; LiveMint; The New Indian Express; Government of Tamil Nadu Press Release, January 2026)