India rejects target for net zero emissions ahead of COP26 climate conference
"It is how much carbon you are going to put in the atmosphere before reaching net zero that is more important," India's environment minister says.
NEW DELHI — India on Wednesday rejected calls to announce a
net zero carbon emissions target and said it was more important for the world
to lay out a pathway to reduce such emissions and avert a dangerous rise in
global temperatures.
India, the world's third-biggest emitter of greenhouse gases
after China and the United States, is under pressure to announce plans to
become carbon neutral by mid-century or thereabouts at next week's climate
conference in Scotland.
But environment secretary R.P. Gupta told reporters that
announcing net zero was not the solution to the climate crisis.
"It is how much carbon you are going to put in the
atmosphere before reaching net zero that is more important."
The United States, Britain and the European Union have set a
target date of 2050 to reach net zero, by which point they will only emit an
amount of greenhouse gases that can be absorbed by forests, crops, soils and
still-embryonic "carbon capture" technology.
China and Saudi Arabia have both set targets of 2060, but
these are largely meaningless without tangible action now, critics say.
Between now and the middle of the century the United States
will release 92 gigatons of carbon into the atmosphere and the E.U. 62
gigatons, Gupta said, citing Indian government calculations. China would have
added a staggering 450 gigatons by its net zero target date, he added.
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