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India’s Climate Ambitions

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: IE

Subject: Environment Conservation

Context: India is preparing to submit its next round of climate commitments (NDCs) for the 2035 horizon even as experts call for a clearer, economy-wide transition plan.

About India’s Climate Ambitions:

What are NDCs?

• Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) are each country’s self-defined climate commitments under the Paris Agreement, updated every five years (Article 4).

• They include targets for emissions reduction, renewable energy, adaptation, climate finance and technology deployment.

India’s Current NDC Targets:

Reduce Emissions Intensity by 45% (2005–2030): India commits to lowering CO₂ emissions per unit of GDP by almost half, signalling a shift toward cleaner production while sustaining economic growth.

50% Non-Fossil Installed Capacity by 2030: India aims to ensure half of its total power capacity comes from solar, wind, hydro, nuclear and biomass, contingent on affordable global finance and technology transfer.

Additional 2.5–3 Bt CO₂ Carbon Sink: Through large-scale afforestation and agroforestry, India plans to expand forest/tree cover to naturally sequester emissions by 2030.

Promote LIFE Movement: India pledges to mainstream sustainable lifestyles through behavioural change campaigns encouraging low-carbon consumption and resource-efficient habits.

Strengthen Adaptation in Vulnerable Sectors: Investments will be scaled in agriculture, water, coastal systems, Himalayan ecology, health and disaster management to reduce climate risks.

Mobilise Climate Finance & Technology: India seeks both domestic funds and international support to expand renewable energy, adaptation systems, and indigenous research in climate technologies.

Performance of India’s Climate Ambitions:

• Non-Fossil Capacity Crossed 50% (June 2025): India achieved its 2030 target ahead of time, indicating rapid renewable expansion and strong policy momentum.

Renewables Hit 51.5% Daily Share (July 2025): For the first time, more than half of India’s electricity demand was met from renewables in a single day, marking a milestone in grid integration.

Emission Intensity Reduced by 36%: Steady efficiency gains and renewable uptake have sharply lowered carbon intensity, placing India ahead of its projected 2030 trajectory.

Global Renewable Ranking: India now ranks 4th globally in total renewables, 3rd in solar, and 4th in wind, reflecting its emergence as a clean-energy powerhouse.

Rapid Electrification Trends: Railways and urban mobility are shifting to electric systems, reducing oil dependence and creating structural emission reductions.

Challenges Associated with Climate Ambition:

• Absolute Emissions Still Rising: Despite efficiency gains, rapid GDP growth means total emissions will peak only around 2035, delaying net-emission decline.

Persistent Coal Dependence: Coal remains critical for grid stability, making rapid phase-down difficult without viable alternatives or CCS solutions.

$62 Billion Annual Investment Need: India requires sustained high-level investment through 2035 for renewables, storage, and grid upgrades, straining fiscal space.

Technology & Storage Gaps: India lacks commercially scalable long-duration storage, green hydrogen systems, and CCS needed for deep decarbonisation.

Inadequate Climate Finance: Global commitments fall short, forcing developing countries like India to self-finance major parts of the transition.

Just Transition Pressures: Coal-heavy states must retrain workers, diversify economies, and ensure welfare as fossil fuel employment declines post-2040.

Adaptation Lag vs. Climate Risks: Heatwaves, urban pollution and extreme weather are rising faster than India’s health, water and urban adaptation capacities.

Way Ahead:

Announce a Peak-Emission Year (~2035): Formally identifying the emissions peak will bolster India’s credibility and align national planning with the 2070 net-zero roadmap.

Target 80% Non-Fossil Capacity by 2035: Scaling solar, wind and storage to ~170 GW will allow clean electricity to dominate supply and meet rising demand reliably.

Phase Down Unabated Coal Post-2030: Stopping new coal plants after 2030 and retiring older units gradually aligns emissions with India’s long-term climate objectives.

Accelerate Electrification of Transport: Electrifying railways, buses and three-wheelers will cut oil imports and urban pollution while supporting clean mobility ecosystems.

Strengthen Carbon Credit Trading Scheme: CCTS must evolve with tighter norms and wider sector coverage to become a credible market tool for emission reductions.

Reform Electricity Pricing: Time-of-day tariffs and market-based trading will allow flexible pricing, supporting variability in renewable-dominated grids.

Revive PM’s Council on Climate Change: A centralised apex body can coordinate federal action, monitor progress, and dynamically refine the national transition strategy.

Conclusion:

India has made early gains in renewables and efficiency, but the next phase needs deeper reforms and sharper targets. A credible, well-financed 2035 transition plan is essential to sustain global trust amid a warming climate. Clear timelines, strong investment and coordinated institutions will decide whether India can achieve a just and ambitious path to net-zero.

Q. “Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) must mainstream forest management for long-term climate finance”. Examine the rationale. What are the associated challenges for developing nations? (10 M)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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