India- Focal point of CoP-26
- InduQin
- Nov 1, 2021
- 2 min read

India under Prime Minister Narendra Modi is all set to to attend the 26th Conference of Parties in Glasgow to set country’s vision for tackling the looming threat of climate change.
The upcoming summit in November is going to be a defining moment for India as it is set to update its 2030 climate targets under Paris Agreement. Reportedly, India is considering an ambitious plan of cutting down by almost half the greenhouse gas emission that it does for every dollar of economic activity.
With just few days remaining for the CoP-26 summit, inter-ministerial consultations are finalising on Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). The focal points of the discussions are revolving around reducing emissions, working on expansion on Renewable Energy Capacity and thus increasing the share of non-fossil fuel sources in the energy generation.
To achieve such a stride, the key plans are around decarbonization of Indian Railways, sales of at least 30% of all new vehicles should be Electronic, National Green Hydrogen Mission’s mandatory use by industry and Urban Forest Programmes for greening atleast 20 hectares across 200 cities.
Tracking India’s performance till date on major goals, it’s well positioned to achieve the major targets by 2030. For instance, out of the 450 GW target for Renewable energy capacity,India has already reached 100 GW (excluding large hydro power plants ) in August 2021 and it already has another 50 GW work in progress & 27 GW under bids. The trends have been very encouraging primarily due to rising ESG investments and establishment of a number of startups in the space which ultimately breads novel tech solutions helping in driving down the costs.
However there have been areas in which India has failed to deliver upon, one of such key segments is creation of additional carbon sinks of 2.5-3 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent, the pace of which fell down considerably as Govt planned to open coal mines in forests as a plan to ramp up economic activities post covid-19 impact.
In this 26th summit, India’s focus is largely going to be around two major sectors – electricity & industry as they contribute to almost 75% of total carbon dioxide emissions. The limelight is however also going to be around India’s global grid declaration which is likely to be adopted this time at Glasgow. ISA (International Solar Alliance) plans to issue a declaration on India’s global electricity grid plan— One Sun One World One Grid (OSOWOG). The global grid plan, $1 trillion solar investment roadmap for 2030, and a blended financial risk mitigation facility are also expected to be discussed during the upcoming fourth general assembly being held virtually between 18 October-21 October.
For developing countries like India, a make-or-break issue will be whether rich countries live up to their promises to make more finance available for mitigation and adaptation. At the Paris Agreement negotiations in 2015, developed countries formalised a pledge to mobilise at least $US100 billion in climate finance per year by 2020, but this stillremains unmet.
Read More at www.financialexpress.com/lifestyle/science/india-focal-point-of-cop-26/2357922/lite/
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