Type to search

International Lead story

India to hit net-zero climate target by 2070: Modi

India’s economy will become carbon neutral

by the year 2070, the country’s prime minister announced Monday at the COP26
climate summit in Glasgow.

“By 2070, India will achieve the target of net-zero emissions,” Narendra
Modi told more than 120 leaders at the critical talks.

India is the last of the world’s major carbon polluters to announce a net-
zero target, with China saying it would reach that goal in 2060, and the US
and the EU aiming for 2050.

Modi also said India would increase its 2030 target for installed capacity
of “non-fossil energy” — mostly solar — from 450 to 500 gigawatts.

In addition, 50 percent of the country’s energy requirements will come from
renewable sources by the same date.

Modi also announced that the carbon intensity of India’s economy — the
amount of emissions produced per unit of GDP — would be reduced by 45
percent by 2030.

The previous goal was 35 percent.

Modi made it clear, however, that emissions-cutting pledges from India and
other developing nations would require finance from rich, historic emitters.

Under the Paris Agreement, countries that submitted carbon cutting plans
under the 2015 treaty were to provide updates five years later, by the end of
2020.

India is the only major economy not to have not done so, but Modi’s
announcement is likely to be formalised in a revised plan, experts suggested.

– Hollow promises –

One key sector where India would aim to lighten its carbon footprint is
rail transport.

“Friends, more passengers than the entire population of the world travel by
Indian Railways every year,” Modi said.

“This huge railway system has set itself a target of making itself ‘net-
zero’ by 2030. This initiative alone will reduce emissions by 60 million
tonnes per annum.”

On finance, Modi lambasted the failure of rich nations to cough up a
promised $100 billion a year by 2020 to help vulnerable nations decarbonise
their economies and cope with climate impacts.

“We all know this truth that the promises made to date regarding climate
finance have proved to be hollow,” he said. “The world ambitions on climate
finance cannot remain the same as they were at the time of Paris Agreement.”

“It is India’s request that developed countries make available one
trillion dollars of climate finance as soon as possible,” he added, without
specifying how such funds should be distributed.

He also called for climate finance flows to be tracked in the same way as
progress on reducing greenhouse gas emissions, which is subject to strict
monitoring.

India has the lowest per capita emissions of the world’s major economies —
emitting five percent of the total, despite accounting for 17 percent of the
world’s population.

AFP

Share now

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Translate »