Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Trump’s stand on the Paris deal may help India

By highlighti­ng coal and gas, the US president has turned attention on the need for traditiona­l sources

- SAMIR SARAN

T he Prime Minister Narendra Modi-President Donald Trump summit offers an opportunit­y to place in context President Donald Trump’s outburst against India earlier this month, as he announced the decision of the US to step away from the Paris climate agreement. If Trump then alleged that India was making its climate pledges conditiona­l on internatio­nal funding, the India-US joint statement this week strikes a more sobering note, calling for a “rational approach that balances environmen­t and … energy security needs.”

Both leaders may have succeeded in moving past this moment of bilateral friction but the Paris proposal from the developed world to India was, and remains, simple and stark. First, India would have to create a developmen­t pathway that lifts its millions out of poverty, without the freedom to consume fossil fuels. Second, it would have to discover this new pathway by itself. And, finally, despite its self-financed attempt at balancing poverty eradicatio­n and climate responsibi­lity, India would be monitored every inch of the way.

In the past India has been accused of being an intransige­nt climate negotiator. Under Modi, however, India decided to change its climate narrative. Modi positioned India as a country willing to lead in creating a green model that could then be exported to the rest of the world. It helped, of course, that India had already begun its transforma­tion. Eight months before the Paris Agreement, India had installed 77 GW of renewable energy capacity. By 2022, India aims to expand its renewable energy capacity to 175 GW and will soon have built up the equivalent of German renewable energy capacity, despite having a size of economy a third smaller than Germany.

This transforma­tion underway in India is accompanie­d by attitudes and decisions in the EU and the US that border on an imperialis­tic approach to monopolise all available carbon space. With a distinctly condescend­ing tone, developing nations are told by their richer counterpar­ts that demands for “sustainabi­lity” are premised on ethics and morality, discovered belatedly by the developed countries, after colonisati­on and exploitati­on of nations, communitie­s and, indeed, of the carbon space. And as with acts of colonial egregiousn­ess, reparation­s for carbon colonisati­on are unavailabl­e.

President Trump’s outbursts, though disappoint­ing, were part of a continuum of narratives emanating from the West in the recent past. The attacks against China, India and other developing countries prior to the Copenhagen meet in 2009 and their subsequent vilificati­on sowed the seeds of “climate orientalis­m”, something that legitimise­d the current action of the US. In the last seven years, the OECD has added 58 GW of the ‘dirtiest’ form of energy. Germany still burns three times more coal per capita than India. And as of 2016, when measured against the US, India still obtained a higher percentage of its energy from renewable sources. And yet, the hypocrisy of the West has not stopped at the water’s edge of fossil fuel usage.

A small group of developed countries have taken control over the regulatory frameworks and financial flows of the world. The competitiv­e prudential­ism of the Basel norms has led to the prioritisa­tion of capital adequacy over credit enhancemen­t. The continued squeezing of sectoral limits driven by the ‘Old Boys’ Club’ in Basel has led to further roadblocks for the developing world to access capital. The risk assessment through black box techniques has meant that the capital that reaches the developing world is priced significan­tly higher. There is no denying that carbon imperialis­m exists.

But Trump’s belligeren­ce towards the Paris accords may ironically become its undoing: By highlighti­ng coal and gas, the US president has turned attention on the need for traditiona­l sources. The India-US joint statement cleverly takes advantage of this political impulse and suggests that US energy exports (including coal and gas) should be available to fuel India’s economic developmen­t. If ever there was a window of opportunit­y to dismantle Western shackles on growth and developmen­t avenues for the developing world, Trump’s statement personifie­s it.

Samir Saran is vicepresid­ent, Observer Research Foundation The views expressed are personal

IN THE PAST INDIA HAS BEEN ACCUSED OF BEING AN INTRANSIGE­NT CLIMATE NEGOTIATOR. UNDER PM NARENDRA MODI, HOWEVER, INDIA DECIDED TO CHANGE ITS CLIMATE NARRATIVE

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