The Ministry of Education’s Department of School Education and Literacy (DoSEL) has launched a nationwide “Green Summer Camps” programme from June 5 to June 30, 2026, under the Eco Clubs for Mission LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment) initiative, coinciding with World Environment Day 2026.
The campaign calls on schools across India to organise hands-on environmental activities linked to seven Mission LiFE themes adopting healthy lifestyles, sustainable food systems, reducing e-waste and waste, saving energy and water, and eliminating single-use plastics.
Schools have been directed to upload details of their activities on the dedicated Eco Clubs portal (ecoclubs.education.gov.in).
The Ministry says the initiative aims to move environmental education beyond textbooks and encourage students to engage directly with sustainability challenges through experiential learning, in line with the goals of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.
Schools Mobilised For Sustainability
Announced on World Environment Day, the month-long programme seeks to transform schools into active hubs of environmental learning and action. In a social media post, the Ministry of Education urged educational institutions nationwide to undertake activities aligned with the seven themes of Mission LiFE.
The Ministry stated, “As part of these Green Summer Camps, schools across the nation are encouraged to undertake activities aligned with the seven themes of Mission LiFE Adopt Healthy Lifestyle, Adopt Sustainable Food Systems, Reduce E-Waste, Reduce Waste, Save Energy, Save Water and Say No to Single Use Plastic.”
The initiative encourages schools to design practical, community-oriented activities rather than limiting environmental awareness to classroom discussions. Suggested programmes include nature walks, kitchen gardening, composting projects, e-waste collection drives, water conservation campaigns, renewable energy demonstrations, plastic-free campus initiatives and awareness workshops on sustainable consumption.
By involving students directly in such activities, the Ministry hopes to foster environmental responsibility at an early age while creating opportunities for young people to understand the impact of their daily choices.
A key component of the programme is the requirement for participating schools to document and upload their activities to the Eco Clubs portal. According to officials, this reporting mechanism is intended to track participation, highlight innovative practices, facilitate knowledge-sharing among schools and build a nationwide repository of environmental action.
The Ministry has also emphasised that the programme supports the experiential learning model advocated under NEP 2020, which encourages students to engage with real-world issues through practical, interdisciplinary learning experiences.
Mission LiFE And Environmental Education
The Green Summer Camps programme forms part of the broader Mission LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment) movement, which promotes environmentally responsible behaviour through individual and collective action.
Launched as a global behavioural change campaign, Mission LiFE advocates sustainable lifestyles as a critical complement to policy interventions aimed at tackling climate change, pollution and resource depletion.
The seven themes selected for the summer camps reflect some of India’s most pressing environmental concerns, including waste management, water scarcity, energy conservation and plastic pollution.
The initiative also builds upon the existing Eco Clubs for Mission LiFE framework, through which schools have long participated in activities such as tree plantation drives, biodiversity conservation efforts and community awareness campaigns.
By expanding the scope of Eco Clubs and integrating Mission LiFE’s behavioural-change approach, the government aims to encourage a deeper and more sustained engagement with environmental issues among students.
Education experts have increasingly highlighted the role schools can play in shaping attitudes towards sustainability, particularly as India grapples with challenges ranging from climate change and declining water resources to rising levels of waste generation.
The timing of the programme is also significant. As environmental concerns become more visible through extreme weather events, water shortages and growing waste management challenges, policymakers are placing greater emphasis on cultivating environmentally conscious habits among younger generations.
Through Green Summer Camps, schools are being positioned not merely as centres of academic instruction but as spaces where students can develop a practical understanding of environmental stewardship and community responsibility.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
The launch of Green Summer Camps represents a welcome effort to bridge the gap between environmental awareness and meaningful action. For many years, sustainability has largely remained a topic discussed in textbooks and awareness campaigns, often disconnected from everyday behaviour.
By encouraging students to participate in practical activities that address waste, water conservation, sustainable food systems and energy use, this initiative has the potential to make environmental responsibility more tangible and relatable for young people.
Also read: No Phones, No Internet Till June 21: Inside the Extraordinary Lockdown Behind NEET-UG 2026 Retest
Department of School Education & Literacy, Ministry of Education, is observing World Environment Day 2026 through Green Summer Camps under the aegis of #EcoClubsforMissionLiFE from 5th to 30th June 2026.
— Ministry of Education (@EduMinOfIndia) June 5, 2026
As part of these Green Summer Camps, schools across the Nation are… pic.twitter.com/5YAj1kP2IV












