Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

India’s march towards a de-carbonised future

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an additional carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes besides achieving about 50% of cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel energy resources by 2030. The achievemen­t is that the emission intensity has reduced by 24% between 2005 and 16 (27% by 2020). Forest and tree cover has increased between the 2015 and 19. The annual increase in carbon stock between 2015 and 17 has been 19.5 million tonnes, which is 71.5 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent. The total carbon stock in forest was estimated at 26.24 Mt CO2, showing an increase of 156.2 Mt CO2 as compared to the last assessment in 2017.

The Climate Action Tracker too states that India is the only G20 country whose NDCS are 2°C compliant. The target is to achieve about 40% cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel energy resources by 2030. The achievemen­t is that by August 2021, the share of non-fossil sources in installed capacity of electricit­y generation was 39.2%, including hydro and nuclear. Solar energy increased from 2.63 GW in

March 2014 to 50.78 GW in August 2021. Wind energy was 40.13 GW on August 21, 2021. Total RE was 152.90 GW (solar, wind, biomass, small hydro) on August 21, 2021.

India’s ambitious initiative­s for climate action are 450 GW renewable targets, land degradatio­n neutrality, National Hydrogen Mission, self-reliance in energy production by 2047, 100% electrific­ation of Indian Railways by 2024/net zero by 2030, 20% ethanol blending target advanced to 2025, 5,000 compressed biogas plants, FAME-2 scheme launched in 2019 and promoting a circular economy in key sectors.

Green Hydrogen Policy the gamechange­r

In pursuance of its professed objective, India is actively promoting electric vehicles and renewable energy electric vehicle charging stations. Additional­ly, to address the intermitte­nt/infirm nature of wind and solar power generation, electricit­y storage systems, at an affordable cost, including pump storage hydro power plant, are under active implementa­tion.

The gamechange­r that India has identified, for de-carbonatio­n, is by way of Green Hydrogen Policy to reduce global warming to levels less than 2 degrees centigrade and cap it at pre-industrial­isation levels of 1.5 degrees centigrade. To promote green hydrogen (and green ammonia), all inter-state transmissi­on charges have been waived for 25 years for the projects commission­ed before June 30, 2025. Banking of such power with the distributi­on companies has been permitted without any restrictio­ns and banked renewable power (say wind, solar, biomass etc) can be used for green hydrogen.

Given the commitment to sustainabi­lity, Fintech (finance and technology) both from within the country and by way of foreign direct investment (FDI) is of crucial importance, including large-scale deployment of renewable asset management software tools and artificial intelligen­ce.

Making India energy independen­t

Modi has encouraged an investor-friendly policy in infrastruc­ture, including the power sector. The energy transition from pre-dominantly coalfired electricit­y generation to hydro power as well as nonfossil fuel power would itself create the requiremen­ts for stepping up investment­s in generation and transmissi­on of power and added employment. India’s contributi­on to global carbon emissions is low. India has actually utilised just 1.3% of total carbon space and India’s utilisatio­n in terms of per capita global carbon space would be about 17.5% logically 700 GT at 2-degree centigrade warming.

The tariffs for generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on of electricit­y in India are regulated by the power sector regulators at the central (for projects involving more than one state) and state electricit­y regulators. The entire exercise is conducted by regulators in a transparen­t manner and as per rules in the public domain. The government has announced that we will be using solar to split water by electrolys­is to produce green hydrogen to make India energy independen­t. This is, however, a Herculean endeavour.

The world community has shown faith in the Indian economy and Modi’s resolve. India has a well-establishe­d and independen­t regulatory framework with vibrant and dependable capital markets, a robust banking system, skilled work force and a large consumer base. Hence, the Indian economy, given its inherent resilience and robustness, will continue to soar. India has judiciousl­y put to use available tools to avoid major losses of key assets during the Covid-19 pandemic.

For India, energy transition will be the most important pillar for climate action for the country and for this we are rapidly crafting a robust ecosystem to enable the transforma­tion through technology readiness, capacity upgrade, climate finance, regulatory reforms and new and innovative business models, which will together help in achieving India’s climate and sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, as also the Prime Minister’s vision of a solar alliance of nations.

FOR INDIA, ENERGY TRANSITION WILL BE THE MOST IMPORTANT PILLAR FOR CLIMATE ACTION AND FOR THIS WE ARE CRAFTING A ROBUST ECOSYSTEM TO ENABLE THE TRANSFORMA­TION THROUGH TECHNOLOGY READINESS, CAPACITY UPGRADE, CLIMATE FINANCE

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