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Global Warming
Rewilding is about rebuilding our bond with nature before time runs out, concur panelists at Indi Setu London Summit. Photo: IBNS

Indi Setu: Wildlife on the Brink: Can We Rewild a Warming World?

| @indiablooms | Oct 25, 2025, at 03:21 pm

London/IBNS:  Can rewilding — in cities, in the wild, and in our stories — become a real strategy for conserving biodiversity as the planet heats up?

A thought-provoking panel on the topic “Wildlife on the brink — Can we rewild a warming world?” at the Indi Setu thought-leadership summit in London this October explored that question with urgency and optimism.

Moderated by Subhra Priyadarshini, Chief Editor of Nature India, the session brought together filmmaker Sabrina Scollan, urban ecologist Nadya Mirochnitchenko, evolutionary geneticist Abhilesh Dhawanjewar, and sustainability academic Rowena Shivam — four voices at the crossroads of science, policy, and storytelling.

Restoring Nature’s Missing Pieces

Mirochnitchenko, who works on reintroducing beavers and harvest mice to London’s wetlands, said rewilding is fundamentally about restoring ecological function.

She noted that beavers have been absent from London for nearly four centuries. Their return is already reshaping how the city manages flood risk and biodiversity. But, she cautioned, “boutique success stories” will not save wildlife unless they scale up with long-term policy support and monitoring.

Dhawanjewar added that genetics must guide rewilding decisions. “We can’t assume ecosystems will simply snap back,” he said — especially with climate change shifting habitats faster than species can adapt. The debate over assisted migration — helping species move to new climates — is now unavoidable. 

Subhra Priyadarshini, Chief Editor of Nature India, moderates the session participated by filmmaker Sabrina Scollan, urban ecologist Nadya Mirochnitchenko, evolutionary geneticist Abhilesh Dhawanjewar, and sustainability academic Rowena Shivam. Photo: IBNS

Rewilding Without the Fairytale

Scollan warned that storytelling often oversimplifies rewilding as nature returning to a perfect past. But true rewilding, she said, is messy, political, and deeply human.

She urged creators to spotlight community voices and link wildlife stories to real-world governance — whether about beavers in London or tigers in India — because coexistence begins where animals and people meet.

The panel offered a media “checklist”:

  • Don’t romanticize — show complexity

  • Centre local and Indigenous perspectives

  • Tie stories to policy and action 

From Pilot Projects to Policy

Shivam stressed that rewilding succeeds only when communities have ownership and financial backing. Enthusiasm must be matched with clear policy frameworks, integration with urban design, and climate adaptation planning.

Tools such as biodiversity credits and community monitoring can help efforts move from isolated pilots into mainstream governance, she added. 

Global Lessons Across Landscapes

The conversation frequently connected London and India:

  • Community-led rewilding in the UK can learn from India’s experience managing tigers, elephants, and leopards alongside people.

  • India’s large-landscape conservation models can inspire cities worldwide to build connected habitat networks, not fragmented green islands. 

Photo: IBNS

A Call to Re-Imagine Our Role

The panel concluded that rewilding must leap from trend to systemic strategy — one that blends science, narrative, and policy to reshape how humans live with nature.

Individuals, they said, can support or volunteer with local ecology groups, advocate for wildlife-inclusive urban planning, use storytelling to document urban species, and hold leaders accountable for their biodiversity commitments.

The session ended with a healthy debate and a strong message: rewilding is not just about bringing wildlife back — it’s about redesigning our relationship with the planet before time runs out.

About Indi Setu London Summit

India-UK cultural diplomacy took center stage at the inaugural Indi Setu Summit in London on Oct 10-11 at the two-day thought leadership event designed to build a new cultural and intellectual bridge, sparking dialogue and collaboration between professionals across borders. Conceptualized by Dr. Amit Ghose (Consultant Urologist & Founding Director, Global Collaboration Forum), the summit featured distinguished participants from different walks of life. 

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