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• Union Minister for Environment, Forest and Climate Change Bhupender Yadav launched the website and logo for the first International Big Cat Alliance (IBCA) Summit 2026 in New Delhi.

• The IBCA Summit will be held on June 1 and 2 in New Delhi.

• Heads of State/government of member and observer countries will participate in the Summit. 

• The theme of the Summit is ‘Save Big Cats, Save Humanity, Save Ecosystem’.

• It would bring together over 400 conservationists, policymakers, scientists, multilateral agencies, financial institutions, corporate leaders and community representatives from across the globe. 

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• A key outcome of the Summit would be the adoption of the first-ever global declaration on big cat conservation, titled the ‘Delhi Declaration’, which will articulate shared priorities, strengthen transboundary cooperation and promote a landscape-based approach for conserving big cats and their habitats.

What is IBCA?

• The IBCA was launched by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi on April 9, 2023, during the event ‘Commemorating 50 years of Project Tiger’. 

• The Union Cabinet, in its meeting held on February 29, 2024, approved the establishment of IBCA with headquarters in India. 

• It was launched with the aim of conservation of seven big cats — tiger, lion, leopard, snow leopard, cheetah, jaguar and puma — with membership of all UN countries/the range countries harbouring the said species and non-range countries where historically these species are not found but interested to support big cat conservation.

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• The IBCA was established by the government of India, through the nodal organisation National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA).

• It is a multi-country, multi-agency coalition comprising 95 big cat range countries, non-range countries with an interest in big cat conservation, conservation partners, scientific organisations engaged in big cat research, as well as business groups and corporates committed to supporting big cat conservation efforts. 

• As of now 23 countries have joined IBCA as members and three countries have opted to be observers. Apart from that 16 countries have given their consent to join IBCA.

• The primary objective of IBCA is to facilitate collaboration and synergy among stakeholders, consolidating successful conservation practices and expertise to achieve a common goal of conservation of big cats at global level. 

• This unified approach, bolstered by financial support, aims to bolster the conservation agenda, halt the decline in big cat populations, and reverse current trends.

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• IBCA envisages synergy through a collaborative platform for increased dissemination of gold standard big cat conservation practices, provides access to a central common repository of technical know-how and corpus of funds, strengthens the existing species-specific intergovernmental platforms, networks and transnational initiatives on conservation and protection and assists securing our ecological future and mitigate adverse effects of climate change.

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