PM’s Modi word: Net Zero 2070, clean & green 2030
Modi makes 5 big announcements, steps up India’s climate-action targets.
Infusing new energy in a climate process desperately waiting
for more ambitious actions, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced Monday that
India would make a one billion-tonne reduction in projected emissions from now
until 2030.
Making five big-ticket announcements at the climate change
meeting in Glasgow — he called it ‘Panchamrit’ — Modi also accepted global
demands to agree to a net-zero emissions target, setting a 2070 date to achieve
it. India was the largest emitter, and the only G20 country, not to have
announced a net-zero target until now, and there was increasing clamor for it
to agree to one.
That apart, the Prime Minister significantly increased
India’s previous climate targets, mentioned in the promises made during the
Paris Agreement. India’s target for installed renewable energy capacity by 2030
has been enhanced from 450 GW to 500 GW. At the same time, the share of
non-fossil fuel energy in India’s total energy mix is now aimed to reach 50 per
cent by 2030 instead of 40 per cent earlier.
In addition, the country’s emissions intensity, or emissions
per unit GDP, will be reduced by at least 45 per cent by the year 2030 from the
2005 levels. In its existing target, India had promised to reduce its emissions
intensity by 33 to 35 per cent by that date
Emphasising that India’s climate targets were not just
another promise amongst several made by other countries, Modi said the Paris
climate meeting, for him, was more than a mere “summit”. It was a “sentiment, a
commitment,” he said, referring to the targets India had set for itself at that
meeting.
India is currently the third largest emitter of greenhouse
gases, releasing over 3 billion tonne every year. According to World Resources
Institute database, India’s total greenhouse gas emissions in 2018 was about
3.3 billion tonne, up from 2.5 billion tonne in 2010. At this rate, India’s
projected emissions between now and 2030 could be in the range of 30-32 billion
tonne.
But India’s emissions are rising, at about 4 to 5 per cent
every year. So the total emissions between now and 2030 is expected to be much
higher, in the range of about 40 billion tonne. It is in this amount, that a
one billion tonne reduction has been announced.
This is the first time India has taken any climate target in
terms of absolute emissions. Before this, the closest reference to altering its
emissions trajectory used to be in the form of emissions intensity. This is
because under the international climate change architecture, only developed
countries are mandated, and expected, to make reductions in their absolute
emissions.
Incidentally, Modi did not make any mention of the forestry target, the only one that India is struggling to achieve.
Of the three promises it had made under the Paris Agreement,
one related to creation of 2.5 billion to three billion tonne of carbon sink
through afforestation efforts. The other two related to reduction in carbon
intensity, and increasing the proportion of non-fossil fuel energy in the total
energy mix, both of which have now been enhanced.
India’s new targets are expected to provide a fresh thrust
to the climate talks which has been making extremely slow progress for the last
few days for the lack of more ambitious action mainly from the developed world.
Of particular concern was the failure of the developed world
to deliver on its decade old promise of mobilizing at least US $100 billion
every year from 2020. That deadline was pushed back last week by at least three
years.
Modi took the developed countries to task on this, and said
US $100 billion was not even enough and must be enhanced substantially.
“We all know that all the promises made on climate finance
have proved hollow. When we are all increasing our ambition on climate actions,
then the ambition on climate finance cannot remain the same that it was at the
time of the Paris Agreement,” he said, asking the developed world to commit one
trillion dollars every year.
Earlier, Boris Johnson, who as Prime Minister of the host
country has been pushing hard for an outcome that could prove decisive in the
fight against climate change, said the impatience of young people would become
unbearable if the world failed to make Glasgow a turning point, and “a moment
that we get real about climate change”.
Borrowing a description from climate activist Greta
Thunberg, Johnson even said all the promises made at the previous climate
meetings would become nothing more than “blah blah blah” if Glasgow did not
deliver something more meaningful.
“We must not fluff our lines or miss our cue because if we
fail, they will not forgive us, they will know that Glasgow was the historic
turning point when history failed to turn,” Johnson said, invoking young
people, and those “not yet born”.
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