Overview
The National Tiger Conservation Authority is a statutory body responsible for strengthening tiger conservation in India. It provides legal backing, policy direction, and institutional oversight to Project Tiger and the management of tiger reserves across the country.
- Established in 2006
- Constituted under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, as amended in 2006
- Functions under the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC)
- Created after concerns over declining tiger populations highlighted by Project Tiger assessment (2005)
- Intended to move tiger conservation from an administrative scheme to a statutory and accountable framework
Objectives
- Provide statutory authority to Project Tiger for enforceable compliance
- Strengthen Centre–State accountability in tiger reserve management
- Ensure Parliamentary oversight over tiger conservation
- Promote long-term conservation of tigers and their habitats
- Address livelihood and coexistence concerns of communities living around tiger reserves
Composition
- Chairperson: Union Minister in charge of MoEFCC
- Vice-Chairperson: Minister of State, MoEFCC
- Members include:
- Three Members of Parliament
- Secretary, MoEFCC
- Experts and officials associated with wildlife conservation
Project Tiger and NTCA
- Project Tiger is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme implemented through NTCA
- NTCA acts as the statutory supervisory body, ensuring compliance with conservation standards
- Funding support is provided to tiger range states for in-situ conservation
Powers and Functions
- Approves Tiger Conservation Plans prepared by State Governments
- Evaluates ecological sustainability and restricts unsustainable land use such as mining or industrial projects within tiger reserves
- Lays down norms and guidelines for tourism in core and buffer areas
- Ensures management of human–wildlife conflict and promotes coexistence in fringe forest areas
- Oversees:
- Tiger population estimation
- Prey base assessment
- Habitat status monitoring
- Disease surveillance and mortality surveys
- Approves and coordinates research and monitoring related to tigers, prey species, and habitats
- Ensures ecological corridors connecting tiger reserves are not diverted for non-sustainable use, except in public interest with due approvals
- Supports eco-development and people’s participation programmes around tiger reserves
- Provides scientific, technological, legal, and capacity-building support to State tiger reserve management
- Has the authority to issue binding written directions to any authority or individual for tiger protection
Significance
- Strengthens India’s position as a global leader in tiger conservation
- Ensures legal protection of tiger habitats beyond administrative discretion
- Balances conservation goals with community livelihoods and federal structure
- Plays a key role in sustaining India’s biodiversity and ecological stability
The National Tiger Conservation Authority is the institutional backbone of tiger conservation in India, ensuring that protection of tigers and their habitats is legally enforceable, scientifically guided, and socially inclusive.
