Millennium Post (Kolkata)

‘India has to bear steep cut in fossil fuel revenues to limit global warming to 1.5 deg C’

India earned USD 92.9 billion in 2019 which accounted for 18% of total govt revenue

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: India will have to bear a steep fall in revenues from fossil fuels in its efforts to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, but advance planning can avoid shortfalls in total revenues, according to a new report by the Internatio­nal Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t (IISD).

India earned a revenue of USD 92.9 billion from fossil fuel production and consumptio­n in 2019 which accounted for 18 per cent of its total government revenue.

It could fall to around 65 per cent of 2019 levels by 2050 on an energy pathway consistent with limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, the independen­t think tank said.

In the 2015 Paris Agreement, countries agreed to hold the increase in the global average temperatur­e to well below 2 degrees Celsius and to pursue efforts to limit the temperatur­e increase to 1.5 degree Celsius”.

To comply with the Paris Agreement, the world will have to phase down fossil fuels, which will erode related revenues.

Titled “Boom and Bust: The Fiscal Implicatio­ns of Fossil Fuel Phase-Out in Six Large Emerging Economies”, the report examines the possible fiscal consequenc­es of phasing out fossil fuels in six emerging economies and suggests strategies for managing the transition.

The countries -- Brazil, Russia,

India, Indonesia, China, and South Africa -- represent 45 per cent of both the world’s population and its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, 25 per cent of global GDP, and a significan­t share of the world’s poor.

These countries are particular­ly vulnerable to the fiscal impacts of the energy transition because of their high reliance on fossil fuel revenues.

The study found that by 2050, overall fossil fuel revenues in these countries could be as much as USD 570 billion lower than a business-as-usual scenario where government­s fail to phase down fossil fuels enough to avoid the worst climate impacts.

The widest gaps are expected to occur in India (USD 178 billion), China (USD 140 billion), and Russia (USD 134 billion).

To prevent devastatin­g climate change, the world has to phase out the production and consumptio­n of fossil fuels, which will inevitably erode related revenues,” said Tara Laan, Senior Associate at IISD and lead author of the report.

“Emerging economies have an enormous opportunit­y to build more resilient and economical­ly sustainabl­e energy systems as they decarboniz­e but they must plan ahead to avoid shortfalls in public revenues that could reverse progress on poverty eradicatio­n and economic developmen­t, Laan said.

This economic planning can be done in climate-positive and socially progressiv­e ways, such as by removing subsidies from and increasing taxes on fossil fuels in ways that don’t hurt the poor like export duties and windfall profits taxes, as imposed by India last week.

The eventual fall in global energy prices will be an opportune time to impose carbon pricing, IISD experts said.

Diversifyi­ng income streams such as new targeted taxes in the energy and transport sectors will also ensure that addiction to fossil fuel revenues does not become a barrier to reform.

To comply with the Paris Agreement, the world will have to phase down fossil fuels, which will erode related revenues

 ?? REPRESENTA­TIONAL IMAGE ??
REPRESENTA­TIONAL IMAGE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India