Under the Paris Agreement (2015), India committed to reduce the emissions intensity of GDP by 45% from 2005 levels by 2030. It pledged to achieve 50% of installed electricity capacity from non-fossil sources by 2030. India also committed to creating an additional 2.5–3 billion tonnes of CO₂-equivalent carbon sink through forests and tree cover.
India’s Progress on Climate Commitments:
- Early Achievement of Non-Fossil Capacity Target: India’s total installed power capacity reached 484.82 GW, of which 242.78 GW (50%) is from non-fossil sources (solar, wind, hydro, nuclear).
- Rapid Renewable Energy Expansion: In 2024 alone, India added a record 30 GW of renewable capacity, including 24 GW of solar.
- Significant Reduction in Emissions Intensity: India reduced its emissions intensity by 36% by 2020 (from 2005 levels), placing it firmly on track to achieve the 45% reduction target by 2030.
- Expansion of Carbon Sink through Forests: As per India State of Forest Report (ISFR) data, India added more than 2.5–3 billion tonne carbon sink so far with annual additions of 150 million tonnes.
- Behavioural Climate Initiatives: India launched innovative missions such as Mission LiFE, Sovereign Green Bonds, MISHTI (mangroves), and the National Adaptation Plan, signalling a shift towards behavioural change.
Key Concerns and Limitations:
- Capacity–Generation Gap: Despite 50% non-fossil capacity, only 28% of electricity generation is clean with coal still accounting for over 70% of power, due to intermittency and grid constraints.
- Rising Absolute Emissions: India’s absolute emissions remain high at 2.96 billion tonnes CO₂e, reflecting partial decoupling, especially in hard-to-abate sectors like steel, cement, and transport.
- Over-Dependence on Solar Energy: Wind, hydro, and nuclear growth remains sluggish due to land acquisition issues, clearance delays, and financing hurdles.
- Ecological Quality of Carbon Sinks: Carbon accounting relies heavily on plantations and monocultures, while natural forest cover increased only marginally at 156 sq km between 2021–23).
- Climate Finance Deficit: Persistent under-delivery of climate finance by developed countries constrains India’s transition, despite its strong mitigation performance.
Way Forward:
- Bridge Capacity–Generation Gap through large-scale battery storage, pumped hydro, smart grids, and transmission upgrades.
- Diversify Clean Energy Mix by fast-tracking wind, hydro, offshore wind, nuclear, and green hydrogen.
- Shift Beyond Power Sector by decarbonising transport and industry using EVs, biofuels, and hydrogen.
- Improve Forest Governance by prioritising native species, agroforestry, and satellite-based monitoring over monoculture plantations.
- Strengthen Climate Finance & Carbon Markets through global advocacy, sovereign green bonds, and a robust domestic carbon trading mechanism.
Conclusion:
The next phase of climate action must move beyond headline metrics toward systemic decarbonisation, ecological integrity, and a just energy transition, reinforcing India’s role as a credible global climate leader.
‘+1’ value-addition:
- India’s per-capita CO₂ emissions (1.9 t) are far below the global average, yet it ranks among the top 3 renewable capacity adders (IEA).
- Renewable expansion now avoids 250 Mt CO₂ annually, equivalent to removing 55 million petrol vehicles.
- India’s 5 MT green hydrogen target (2030) could cut 50 Mt CO₂ from steel and fertiliser sectors.
- Despite ₹1.95 lakh crore CAMPA funds, poor utilisation (e.g., Delhi 23%) limits effective carbon sink outcomes.
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