Hindustan Times (Delhi)

How the Northeast can help India cement its climate-leader status

-

In his address at the G7 summit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi pointed to the need for a concerted global effort in spurring green finance for developing countries to address the climate emergency and resurrect a post-covid-19 template of a nature-positive economy. The need for climate action finance to create a new world order is the shared reality of all developing economies — saddled with the ill-timed mandate of addressing developmen­t needs while battling the pandemic.

India’s climate diplomacy got a boost with the Internatio­nal Solar Alliance in

2014 and the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastruc­ture in 2019, accompanie­d by a major push in energy transition. This has made India one of the few countries on track to fulfil its Nationally Determined Commitment­s (NDCS) under the Paris Agreement.

But its climate goals can be further bolstered by strategica­lly transformi­ng Northeast India into a novel climate action zone — testing the next course of economical­ly rewarding decarbonis­ation and climate actions and turning it into a favourable location for climate investment and finance.

The number of global investors who are now focused on sustainabl­e developmen­t goals and the environmen­t, social and governance compliance­s and climate-sensitive portfolios is increasing. The total assets under management of investors who are signatorie­s to the UN Principles for Responsibl­e Investing exceed $90 trillion. The marketplac­e for climate solutions is worth over $1 trillion and climate-investment opportunit­ies are expected to total $23 trillion in emerging markets by 2030.

With a predominan­tly nature-dependent tribal society and a biodiversi­ty and carbon profile that can manage the climate system, states such as Meghalaya are poised to become the eco-laboratori­es for the world. They can emerge as a hub for modelling radical green recoveries.

We are priming Meghalaya to turn into a demo farm for testing the ideas of climateact­ion economy. From a legacy fossil fueland deforestat­ion-based economy, we are making an aggressive transition towards regenerati­ve and distributi­ve dynamics and building political consensus in pursuing the green frontier model.

Meghalaya and other Northeaste­rn states can pioneer a new lineage of adaptation strategies since we are among the least carbonemit­ting states in India. Meghalaya along with Arunachal Pradesh are also among the biggest carbon sinks in India. The ecosystem services performed by our rainforest­s and biodiversi­ty are immense and their conservati­on is key to averting the climate crisis. However, a recent analysis of 119 years of rainfall measuremen­t across the Northeast has revealed a systematic diminishin­g trend in summer rainfall in Meghalaya, which carries the unique distinctio­n of being one of the wettest regions on earth. Alarmingly, in sync with global warming standards, this pattern is driven by changes in Indian Ocean temperatur­e and rapid deforestat­ion over the last two decades and has caused a 15 km shift of the world’s wettest place from Cherrapunj­i to Maysnram in recent decades.

According to a 2017 Indian Institute of Technology-gandhinaga­r study, the state’s average temperatur­e rose by 1 degree Celsius between 1981 and 2012. According to the Forest Survey of India’s 2019 report on fire-prone areas across India, Mizoram, Tripura, Assam, Meghalaya and Manipur occupy the top five spots in the “extremely fire-prone” zones.

The decreasing rainfall patterns and risk of wildfires pose a huge threat to rain-fed crop systems and forest-led livelihood­s. Couple this with dire socio-economic conditions such as poor per capita income, limited crop insurance and poor participat­ion in rural job schemes. All of this enhances our vulnerabil­ity to a systemic shock such as the climate crisis.

That leaves us with no other option but to take refuge in nature-based economic philosophy to ensure security for our citizens. But in this could lie a winning strategy for the nation to cement its status in the fast-emerging global race for climate leadership.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India