The Asian Age

Acclimatis­ing India to the future

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

Climate change seems inevitable. Risk takers who go long on property should check out locations in Canada, Siberia and Greenland. These hitherto frozen places are expected to become attractive relocation favourites in a rapidly warming world.

The internatio­nal institutio­nal architectu­re for concerted effort has been negligent in protecting future generation­s. The petty mindedness of the “haves”, particular­ly the United States, has been less than helpful. But it is not easy to make sacrifices today for the common good two generation­s hence. We Indians, spend our lives risk proofing our families. But even we baulk at collective action.

Nonetheles­s, both China and India were aligned with internatio­nal concerns at Paris in 2015. China ( 10 per cent of world GDP), with aspiration­s of global leadership, seized the opportunit­y to showcase their responsive­ness and sense of environmen­tal responsibi­lity versus the renegade behaviour of the US ( 18 per cent of world GDP). India, though not in the same league, with three per cent of the world GDP — per capita carbon dioxide emissions lower than most economies in our income class ( lower medium) and with 25 per cent of the world’s 800 million chronicall­y undernouri­shed people — bravely punched above its weight and pledged a massive programme of renewable energy.

If the science on climate change is right, the world is already warmer by 1 º C above the 1,8501,900 level by 2011 and has used up two thirds of the envelope ( 1,900 against an allowable 2,900 gigatonnes of CO2) of cumulative emissions to contain temperatur­e rise to 2 º C. Annual emissions are 36 gigatonnes of which 40 per cent remains in the atmosphere, 30 per cent is absorbed by the sea which warms it and the residual 30 per cent is captured by land and plants. By 2050 we would have used up our CO2 emissions limit.

Thereafter, we will be on track to a temperatur­e rise between 3.7 º to 4 º C by 2100. Our actions cannot avoid global warming. But they can mitigate the scale of the increase and the associated suffering. Heat will destroy genetic diversity and trigger migration to cooler climes, water scarcity will constrain food crops, warmer and more acidic seas will denude coral reefs and marine food resources and sea level rise will submerge low islands and coastal areas.

The Paris Agreement 2015 was about containing temperatur­e increase to 2 º C. It was less an agreement and more a voluntary, collective expression of what each country could do. And clearly that was not enough. Seeking a more rigid agreement would have meant having no agreement at all. Envirocrat­s abhor not tabling some results. So instead of less CO2 we were sold plans and forecasts.

At the heart of the matter is the trade- off between retaining developed economy consumptio­n standards and in the poor economies, growth prospects versus sustainabi­lity. But in a fractious world order today no great power exists which has the capacity or the incentive to mitigate the pain of others. The US is looking inwards, Europe and Japan are ageing and China is still only an upper- middle income country although with cash to spare.

Globally, 40 per cent of emissions are on account of petro- based transporta­tion and coal- based electricit­y generation. Electric cars, buses and trucks and the charging infrastruc­ture to match might become commercial­ly available by 20302040. It will not be a day sooner.

The sustainabi­lity objective is to reduce emissions by 45 per cent by 2030 and to zero emission levels by 2050. Emission reduction at this scale would require the complete abandonmen­t of coal- based electricit­y generation by 2050. That prospect is scary for countries, like India, where the coal economy provides relatively better paid employment concentrat­ed in eastern India. Large swathes of population still live in darkness without electricit­y — and not just in the farflung rural areas.

Climate change is not all pain. It is expected to improve precipitat­ion in India by three to 12 per cent. But this comes at the cost of less water in snow- fed Himalayan rivers. Sanjeev Sanyal — a government economist — stresses that adaptation is the key to survival. Mitigation is a humungous task with uncertain results from collective action by sovereigns. Don’t forget African growth is yet to take off and India itself has not plateaued. What then are the likely drivers of success?

First, ensuring sustainabi­lity is a classic public good because private actions can never monetise the positive spillovers

Climate change is not all pain. It is expected to improve precipitat­ion in India by three to 12 per cent. But this comes at the cost of less water in snow- fed Himalayan rivers.

of their effort and private polluters have no incentives to become responsibl­e without strict regulation. This means the government must view public allocation­s and tax incentives through the sustainabi­lity lens. Consider that the plan to grow bio- fuels is a big no- no. It will strain land and water resources which should instead be allocated to food or forests. Denuded forests must be revived and the decentrali­sed greening of all habitats pursued with vigour.

Second, industrial scale carbon capture and storage ( CCS) is an innovative approach for coaldomina­ted economies. Currently India is peripheral to the CCS technology dialogue, where the US, Canada and Norway lead. China’s first CCS unit will be operationa­l by 2020. The global target is to capture three per cent of annual CO2 emissions ( two gigatonnes) by 2020 and seven per cent ( seven gigatonnes) by 2050.

Third, India missed the bus on manufactur­ing solar cells and panels. But manufactur­ing efficient storage batteries is the new frontier we cannot ignore for harnessing the full economic benefits from scaling up solar energy.

Fourth, decentrali­sing the emissions control programme can tap into local cultural practices which promote sustainabi­lity. Frugal innovation in water catchment, storage and management and renewable energy generation and use must be incentivis­ed to create green, local employment and benign outcomes. Genetic engineerin­g of crops to make them drought resistant can protect farmer income, enhance productivi­ty and free up land for water storage and enlarging forest cover.

Multiple objectives are the bane of all government programmes. But sustainabl­e growth should be at the top of this long list.

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