Union Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav Arrives in Coimbatore; Attends Key Wildlife Meetings

Union Minister for Environment, Forest and Climate Change Bhupender Yadav arrived in Coimbatore on Wednesday for a series of high-level meetings and field visits on wildlife conservation and forest management. He was accorded a warm reception at the Coimbatore International Airport by BJP leaders and party workers.


Coimbatore: Union Minister for Environment, Forest and Climate Change Bhupender Yadav arrived in Coimbatore from New Delhi on Wednesday to participate in a series of official meetings and field visits related to wildlife conservation and forest governance.

The Minister was accorded a warm reception at the Coimbatore International Airport by BJP leaders and party workers. Members of the BJP Mahila Morcha welcomed him with a traditional Poorna Kumbha reception and presented him with a floral garland, while party cadres greeted him with slogans.



During his visit, the Minister, along with senior officials from the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, will chair meetings of the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife, the Central Zoo Authority, and the Wildlife Institute of India Society. The meetings are being held in Coimbatore as part of the Centre’s initiative to conduct wildlife governance deliberations closer to forest landscapes, enabling ground-level consultations in ecologically sensitive regions.

As part of the visit, Bhupender Yadav is expected to inspect the Anamalai Tiger Reserve and the Parambikulam Wildlife Sanctuary. He is also scheduled to stay at Topslip near Pollachi and participate in a series of review meetings with Forest Department officials in Pollachi and Coimbatore.



The Coimbatore visit assumes significance as it follows a meeting held in New Delhi on Tuesday between the Union Minister and Kerala Forest Minister Shibu Baby John, during which the Kerala government sought greater Central support to tackle the growing challenge of human-wildlife conflict. The discussions covered recurring fatalities caused by wildlife attacks, measures to mitigate conflicts in forest-fringe villages, and Kerala’s demand for greater flexibility in managing the rising wild boar population under the provisions of the Wildlife (Protection) Act.

With the Anamalai landscape in Coimbatore facing challenges similar to those witnessed in neighbouring Kerala—including elephant intrusions into human settlements, crop damage, and recurring human-wildlife conflicts—the Minister’s visit is expected to assume added importance. Farmers, forest-fringe residents, and officials are expected to closely watch the outcome of the deliberations, with hopes that they will pave the way for long-term policy interventions and practical solutions to issues that have affected the region for years.

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