News Highlight
Incorporating the promises made by India at the Glasgow conference, India enhanced its climate change targets for 2030.
Key Takeaways
- India was now committing itself to at least a 45 per cent reduction in the emissions intensity of Gross Domestic Product (emissions per unit of GDP) from 2005 levels.
- The climate change targets was a 33 to 35 per cent reduction.
- India is also promising to ensure that at least 50 per cent of installed electricity generation capacity in 2030 would be based on non-fossil fuel-based sources.
- This is an increase from the existing 40 per cent climate change targets.
Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs).
- Countries across the globe adopted an international climate agreement at the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Conference of the Parties (COP21) in Paris in 2015.
- The countries publicly outlined what post-2020 climate actions they intended to take under the new international agreement, known as their Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs).
- The INDCs largely determine whether the world achieves the long-term goals of the Paris Agreement:
- To hold the increase in global average temperature to well below 2°C.
- To pursue efforts to limit the increase to 1.5°C
- To achieve net zero emissions in the second half of this century
INDC of India
- Reduce emissions intensity of its GDP( Gross Domestic Product) by 33 to 35% by 2030 from 2005 level.
- Achieve about 40% electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel-based energy resources by 2030.
- Create an additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tones of CO2 equivalent through additional forest and tree cover by 2030.
Updated INDC of India
- The Union Cabinet recently approved an update to India’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC).
- These are called five commitments, or Panchamrit, they are
- Increase the non-fossil energy capacity to 500 GW (gigawatt) by 2030.
- Meet 50% of India’s energy requirements from “renewable energy” by 2030.
- Reduce the total projected carbon emissions by one billion tones from now till 2030.
- Reduce the carbon intensity of its economy by more than 45%
- Achieve the target of “net zero” by the year 2070
The National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC)
- The NAPCC was launched in 2008 by the Prime Minister’s Council on Climate Change.
- The NAPCC identifies measures that promote development objectives while yielding co-benefits for effectively addressing climate change.
- Eight “National Missions” form the core of the National action plan. They are
- National Solar Mission:
- The mission’s objective is to increase the share of solar energy in the country’s total energy mix while also expanding the scope of other renewable sources.
- National Mission for Enhanced Energy Efficiency:
- It mandates specific energy consumption decreases in large energy-consuming industries
- Creates a framework to certify excess energy savings and with market-based mechanisms to trade these savings.
- National Mission on Sustainable Habitat:
- The aim of the Mission is to make habitats more sustainable through a threefold approach that includes:
- Improvements in the energy efficiency of buildings in the residential and commercial sectors
- Management of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW)
- Promote urban public transport
- The aim of the Mission is to make habitats more sustainable through a threefold approach that includes:
- National Water Mission:
- The National Water Mission aims at conserving water, minimising wastage and ensuring more equitable distribution through integrated water resource management.
- National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem:
- It reaffirms Adopting appropriate land-use planning and watershed management practices for sustainable development of mountain ecosystems.
- Adopting best practices for infrastructure construction in mountain regions to avoid or minimise damage to sensitive ecosystems and despoiling of landscapes.
- National Mission for a Green India:
- This Mission aims to enhance ecosystem services such as carbon sinks.
- It builds on the Prime Minister’s Green India campaign for afforestation of 6 million hectares and the national target of increasing the land area under forest cover from 23% to 33%.
- National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture:
- The aim is to make Indian agriculture more resilient to climate change by identifying new varieties of crops, especially thermal resistant ones and alternative cropping patterns.
- National Mission on Strategic Knowledge for Climate Change:
- This Mission strives to work with the global community in research and technology development and collaboration through a variety of mechanisms and, in addition, will also have its research agenda supported by a network of dedicated climate change related institutions and universities and a Climate Research Fund.
Pic Courtesy : NASA
Content Source: The Indian Express.