Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

India lists long-term goals, ups the ante against rich countries

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

SHARM EL SHEIKH: India on Monday released its long-term climate action strategy, detailing how it will take steps like rapidly expanding renewable energy sources and exploring a greater role for nuclear power to reach net zero emissions by 2070, but separately also turned up the heat on developed countries to do more.

Environmen­t minister Bhupender Yadav, representi­ng India at the UN Climate Conference (COP27) at Sharm El Sheikh in Egypt, used two occasions at the summit to call on rich countries to do more: First, he said, some of them must reach net zero emissions even before 2030, and, second, they must elaborate on their immediate plans on how they intend to reach their targets since some have “turned back to fossil fuels” due to the ongoing energy crisis.

The first stance was made during the ministeria­l high-level roundtable on the pre-2030 ambition, where Yadav pointed out that rich nations had not met their commitment­s for the 2020 deadline. “So pre-2030 ambition must be measured in terms of whether countries are staying within their fair share of the carbon budget, taking note of both the historical period and in the future. By this scientific criterion, some developed countries must reach net zero even before 2030 and 2050 is not enough at all,” Yadav said in his interventi­on.

The other calls on rich countries to do more were articulate­d during the launch of India’s longterm low emission developmen­t strategy (LT-LEDS), which India released on Monday, becoming one of only 57 countries to do so.

“We also call upon developed countries to elaborate on their immediate plans on how they would achieve their targets. We see that following the current energy crisis, many have turned back to increased fossil fuels for energy security. It is not enough to say that targets for emissions reduction will be met, when the reality is that they will unequally consume even more of the carbon budget,” Yadav said.

“In a COP of Implementa­tion, it is essential to make progress on adaptation and loss and damage. Now is the time to tell the developing world how the promise of USD 100 billion is to be met. We, at Glasgow, noted with regret that it is indeed not being met. The world would like to know how the resources for meeting the world’s adaptation needs, whose estimates are rising constantly, are to be mobilised.”

India’s LT-LEDS itself is premtors, ised on four key considerat­ions, the environmen­t minister said.

First, India has contribute­d little to global warming despite being home to a sixth of the world’s population; second, India has significan­t energy needs for developmen­t; third, India is committed to pursuing low-carbon strategies for developmen­t and, fourth, India need’s climate resilience.

“The LT-LEDS has been prepared in the framework of India’s right to an equitable and fair share of the global carbon budget. This is the practical implementa­tion of India’s call for ‘climate justice’,” he said. Developmen­ts over recent days suggest rifts are widening over developing nations such as India and developed countries over the climate crisis action plan.

US Special Climate Envoy John Kerry said on Sunday that a few countries have resisted mentioning a global goal of limiting warming to 1.5°C in the official text of the COP27, Euronews reported.

A senior delegate from India also said on Saturday that during meetings on mitigation work programmes (MWP) – measures that relate to lowering emissions -- rich countries outlined the top 20 emitters and insisted that the measures be addressed to these.

This is key because many of the top emitters in absolute terms are developing countries like India, China and Brazil, but in per capita terms, and when historical emissions are considered, their role in the warming of the planet has been demonstrab­ly lower than industrial­ised western nations.

Observers also said the US and other Annex 1 countries were trying to selectivel­y push a language on 1.5°C goal that goes against principles of equity and “common but differenti­ated responsibi­lities” that were agreed upon under the Paris Agreement, and indirectly pushes all countries to embrace net zero emission goals by 2050.

“You cannot selectivel­y use the 1.5°C goal for cover text when finance to achieve that goal has not come through. We will oppose such moves because it’s not equitable,” said a member of the Indian delegation, asking not to be named.

Scientists and independen­t experts have already said that the 1.5°C goal seems practicall­y impossible to achieve under current circumstan­ces and the world needs to immediatel­y cut emissions to levels last recorded in 2020, when widespread lockdowns shut industrial and civilian activity across the world for months on end. “It is developing countries who will face far more severe consequenc­es if we breach the target of limiting the global temperatur­e rise to 1.5°C. Rich industrial­ised countries are cherry-picking language from the climate talks at COP27 to shift the blame to poorer nations, while using all possible tricks to delink emissions reduction targets with equity and their obligation to provide scaled up finance,” said Harjeet Singh, head of Global Political Strategy, Climate Action Network Internatio­nal.

India’s long term plan

The submission to the LT-LEDS builds on India’s nationally determined contributi­ons (NDCs) declared at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in August. The NDCs articulate a net zero commitment by 2070, and vow that India will reduce the emissions intensity of its gross domestic product (GDP) by 46% from 2005 levels by 2030, and achieve about 50% cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-renewable sources by the end of this decade.

The long-term plan now builds on the 2070 goal with six elements: These include: expanding renewables and strengthen­ing the grid; exploring a greater role for nuclear energy and enhancing support for R&D into future technologi­es such as green hydrogen, fuel cells, and biofuels; appropriat­e demand-side measures such as energy efficiency improvemen­ts; rational utilisatio­n of fossil fuel resources; enabling a focused transition towards low carbon developmen­t; and optimum energy mix compliment­ing national developmen­t scenarios.

The strategic transition­s will be sectors including electricit­y, transport, urbanisati­on, industry, CDR (carbon dioxide removal) forests, LiFE – Lifestyle for Environmen­t, and internatio­nal cooperatio­n. Under electricit­y for example, the focus will be on expanding renewables and strengthen­ing the grid.

A transition to a low-carbon developmen­t pathway will involve costs, pertaining to the deployment of new technologi­es, developmen­t of new infrastruc­ture, and other transactio­n costs. “In the longer term, such a transition will also have broader economic impacts. Several estimates regarding India’s financial needs exist. Estimates vary across studies due to difference­s in assumption­s, coverage, and modelling approaches, but fall in the range of trillions of dollars by 2050. In general, finance needs – and the domestic financing gap – are considerab­le, indicating a need for greater internatio­nal support,” the LT-LEDS report said.

Meeting finance needs require mobilising and scaling up financial resources internatio­nally as well as mobilising domestic finance. Internatio­nal sources include multilater­al and bilateral sources, dedicated climate funds, internatio­nal institutio­nal investeau, and the private sector will be key. “India’s LT-LEDS is an important statement of intent to pursue low-carbon strategies for developmen­t, and a sound beginning toward doing so,” said Navroz K Dubash, professor, Centre for Policy Research, which anchored the research for India’s long-term strategy. The strategy is firmly, and appropriat­ely, anchored in considerat­ions of climate equity. It calls for developed countries to undertake early net-zero and to provide adequate finance and technology in support of India’s plans for lowcarbon developmen­t, CPR said in a statement. “India’s LT-LEDS should be viewed as a living document. Future iterations should emphasise robust and transparen­t modelling towards net-zero by 2070, and more detailed discussion with states,” Dubash added.

Push on finance

At the ministeria­l meeting that Yadav addressed earlier, India also made it clear that carbon offsets of the kind US announced on November 9, called the Energy Transition Accelerato­r (ETA), may not be able address climate finance needs of developing countries. “Leaving it to markets alone will not help. Markets function well in normal times, but either do not function or function very inequitabl­y in moments of crises. We see this with the energy crisis in developed countries,” Yadav said.

Yadav called for an “ambitious flow of financial resources from various sources”, with “with developed countries playing a pivotal role in incentivis­ing flows to developing countries so that finance - the key means of implementa­tion - is at grant/concession­al rates”. “The commitment made by the developed countries to mobilise $100 billion from diverse sources by 2020 was a meagre amount and remains unachieved till now. The current needs of developing countries are estimated to be in the order of trillions,” Yadav said.

There are several estimates of climate finance flown till now. The Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t estimates the flows to be $83.3 billion in 2020 and $79.9 billion in 2018, while Oxfam estimates the amount to be in the range of $19-22.5 billion per year since 2017-18. Other estimates from UNFCCC put it at $45.4 billion in 2017 and $51.8 billion in 2018, the minister’s statement said. “Evidently, there is no understand­ing of what really comprises climate finance. Transparen­cy and Trust are the backbones of all multilater­al discussion­s,” Yadav said.

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