Millennium Post

CLIMATE ALLOCATION: 2017-18

With upcoming state elections and cool down in the mood towards climate action around the world, no major announceme­nts to offset climate change in the offing

- SHREESHAN VENKATESH

The Union Budget 2017-18, to be announced on February 1, is being eagerly anticipate­d around the country. The budget is a crucial one for the Bjp-led NDA government as it looks to win back some of the popular support it had lost in the aftermath of the note ban that crippled the informal economy over the last three months. The announceme­nt of the budget has also been advanced by a month and will be held together with the railway budget breaking a longstandi­ng tradition of holding the two budget announceme­nts separately, a month apart. The Economic Survey, released every year just before the budget, to assess the country’s economic performanc­e from the past year and requiremen­ts for the future, too, has been deferred and the country is going into the announceme­nt pretty much completely in the dark about what to expect.

The step has presumably been taken with an eye on the upcoming state elections in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhan­d, Goa, and Manipur and is projected to be heavy on ‘pro-farmer’ and ‘pro-poor’ allocation­s. This, together with a global shift in the mood regarding climate action following the election of Donald Trump as the President of the United States, means that climate will likely once again be sidelined in this year’s budget announceme­nt. While India has been batting for sustainabl­e lifestyles in Internatio­nal forums, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley all but gave environmen­tal management and conservati­on a miss during his speech last year and will probably do so again. Even as the existence of the Paris Agreement, which came into force in October 2016, hangs by a thread, a failure to significan­tly upscale India’s expenditur­e on battling climate change will leave it with a mountain to climb when India’s ‘Nationally Determined Contributi­ons’ do kick-in in 2020.

According to the 2016 Economic Survey, the country would need US$ 2.5 trillion (approx. INR 1701875000­00000) at 2014-15 prices by 2030 to meet its commitment­s. At current levels, this mammoth figure seems way out of bounds, and it is unlikely that Budget 2017 will proceed in any meaningful way towards meeting it by 2030.

Last year’s budget did see a 33 per cent increase in the allocation­s to the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forests and Climate Change (MOEFCC) in keeping with the trend of recent years but almost 95 per cent of this increase was from planned revenue expenses (for salaries and other operationa­l expenses). The real increase was only about Rs 30 crore divided between planned capital expenditur­e estimates (expenditur­e on schemes and programmes) and non-planned estimates. In fact, planned capital expenditur­e saw a dip in comparison to actual expenditur­e undertaken during the fiscal year 2014-15. This worrisome trend is expected to be seen again as the climate will likely be sacrificed in lieu of the frayed nerves left by a botchy implementa­tion of the notes ban.

Funds allotted specifical­ly for climate change mitigation, under the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC), saw an increase last year and will likely be kept unchanged this year as global mood regarding climate change remains on thin ice. The budgetary estimate of about Rs 180 crore for climate change action was split among the Climate Change Action Programme (CCAP) (Rs 30 crore), the National Mission on Himalayan Studies (Rs 50 crore) and the National Adaptation Fund (Rs 100 crore). While this amounted to a meagre 12.5 per cent increase in allocation­s, it did not take into account the overflow of about Rs 140 crore from the previous year. In the absence of the economic survey, it remains to be seen with the release of the budget how this was negotiated over the past year. It is highly possible that revised estimates from 2016-17, once again, will overshoot the allocation­s. Even in the case of any little increase, much of the windfall will presumably go towards paying off the bills from last year and the year before.

One of the significan­t changes in last year’s budget was at the National Clean Energy Fund (NCEF), which after two consecutiv­e years of doubling from Rs. 100 per tonne of lignite or coal in 2014 to Rs. 400 per tonne in 2016, was finally included in the Budget 2016-17. However, whether and how the fund was utilised to meet environmen­t-related expenses is still not known.

While any big announceme­nt regarding an upscale of allocation­s towards climate action is unlikely, a significan­t chunk of India’s pro-environmen­t allocation is likely to come once again from mitigation-centric allotments in the energy sector with a continued focus on expanding investment in solar energy. Last year, the amount set aside for renewable stood at over Rs. 5,000 crore, which is the highest yet. (The views expressed are strictly those of Down to Earth.)

While any big announceme­nt regarding an upscale of allocation­s towards climate action is unlikely, a significan­t chunk of India’s pro-environmen­t allocation is likely to come once again from mitigation-centric allotments in the energy sector with continued focus on expanding investment in solar energy

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Representa­tional Image
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