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Climate change: Can India meet its targets?

Ns News Online Desk:Ns News Online Desk: India’s Prime Narendra Modi has set his country a target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2070, a significantly later deadline than many other countries attending the Glasgow climate summit. India also set itself a deadline of 2030 to reduce its emissions by one billion tonnes.

After China and the US, India is the third largest emitter of carbon dioxide (CO2).

With its rapidly growing population and an economy heavily dependent on coal and oil, its emissions are on a steep upward trajectory unless action is taken to curb them. India has resisted setting overall reduction targets, saying industrialized nations should bear a much greater share of the burden as they have contributed far more towards global warming over time.

It says an “emissions intensity” target, which measures emissions per unit of economic growth, is a fairer way to compare it with other countries, it says. By 2030 Mr Modi says India will reduce the emissions intensity of its economy by 45% (that’s of all greenhouse gases not just CO2) – a more ambitious target than the previous goal of a 33-35% cut in its emissions intensity from the 2005 level by 2030.

But a fall in carbon emissions intensity does not necessarily mean a reduction in overall emissions.Climate Action Tracker (CAT), which monitors government policies and actions, says the target is unlikely to have an impact on limiting overall projected emissions.The Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says a target of global net zero – where a country is not adding to the overall amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere – by 2050 is the minimum needed to keep the temperature rise to 1.5C.

And more than 140 countries have publicly promised to meet this.India’s prime minister has pledged that it will increase its non-fossil fuel energy capacity to 500 gigawatts (GW) by 2030. It currently has a capacity of around just 100GW and had previously set itself a target of reaching 175GW by next year, which it looks likely to miss.

Although the new target for 2030 is more ambitious, it will only have a “small impact on real-world emissions,” says Climate Action Tracker.Also in 2015, India promised to provide 40% of all electric power from non-fossil fuel sources by 2030. Mr Modi has now increased this figure to 50%.

Generation capacity from these sources stands at around 39% as of September this year, according to India’s official statistics. But the actual amount generated in 2020 was lower at around 20%, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

Cindy Baxter, of CAT, says developing countries such as India, need international support to de carbonize their economies and limit the temperature increase to 1.5C in line with the Paris Agreement.

“India does not have a conditional target that identifies where…or indeed how much support it needs.”

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