Oman Daily Observer

India to play constructi­ve role at UN climate summit: Vardhan

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KATOWICE: Environmen­t Minister Harsh Vardhan on Monday said the high level of greenhouse gas emission was a major concern and reaffirmed that India would play a “positive, constructi­ve and balanced role” in the UN climate summit.

“Our focus is on shifting to renewables,” Vardhan told reporters on the sidelines of the two-week-long UN climate negotiatio­ns, known as COP24, that saw government­s and delegates from nearly 200 countries in this Polish city. The talks officially began on Monday with the opening address of UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres.

Responding to a question on clean coal, the minister said: “We have an ambitious target of 175GW. We use super critical technology which has comparativ­ely less emissions.

“We have also announced stringent emission standards and we are retrofitti­ng existing coal plants with the latest technology. The ones that can’t be upgraded are being shutdown. Close to 52GW of old plants have been shutdown till date,” Vardhan said.

He added that India wanted to see the UN climate summit as a success.

Ahead of India’s second Biennial update report, which was earlier scheduled to be released by Vardhan at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change or COP24 on Monday, a projection on India’s progress by Us-based The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) said India was “on track to achieve the majority of its Paris agreement goals”.

The Paris agreement urged each country outline, update and communicat­e their post-2020 climate actions, known as nationally determined contributi­ons (NDCS), reflecting the country’s ambition for reducing emissions, taking into account its domestic circumstan­ces and capabiliti­es.

India’s progress on two of its three Paris agreement commitment­s were to achieve 40 per cent of electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel by 2030 and to reduce the emissions intensity of its GDP by 33-35 per cent by 2030 from the 2005 level.

IEEFA found that India was likely to achieve these two goals 10 years before the 2030 deadline.

For the first goal, IEEFA predicted that installed non-fossil fuel capacity in India will exceed 40 per cent by the end of 2019.

And at the current rate of two per cent reduction per year in emission intensity of its GDP, India is likely to achieve 33-35 per cent of emission intensity reduction targets a decade ahead of target.

To a question on the latest assessment on NDCS, Vardhan said: “We are much ahead on delivering our NDCS. We have already achieved 21 per cent emission intensity reduction, including emissions from agricultur­e, whereas our NDCS exclude agricultur­al emissions from its scope.”

“We believe we will achieve these goals much before 2022,” he said.

“We have set a target but are not waiting for the deadline... Our aim is to achieve targets fixed by the Prime Minister at the earliest. We are conscious of the targets but are even more concerned to achieve it ahead of time.” — IANS

India’s progress on two of its three Paris agreement commitment­s were to achieve 40 per cent of electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel by 2030 and to reduce the emissions intensity of its GDP by 33-35 per cent by 2030 from the 2005 level.

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