India’s climate leadership is an example to the world

India has assumed a pivotal role in its efforts to tackle climate change, as a leading voice on sustainability. (AFP)
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Updated 15 August 2024
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India’s climate leadership is an example to the world

  • Country’s per-capita carbon footprint is lowest among G20 nations

NEW DELHI: India is the world’s largest country in terms of population, comprising about 17 percent of the global total. It is also the fifth-largest economy in the world and on its way to becoming the third-largest by 2030.

Yet its contribution to cumulative carbon dioxide emissions since the industrial revolution is a mere 3.4 percent of the global total. And at 2 tonnes, its per-capita emissions are less than half the global average of 4.7 tonnes.

India’s per-capita carbon footprint is also the lowest among G20 countries, and the International Finance Corporation has acknowledged that the nation is the only G20 member that is in line with the international target of limiting warming to less than 2 degrees Celsius compared with preindustrial levels.

Additionally, the IFC has highlighted the fact that India’s gross domestic product grew by a compound annual growth rate of about 7 percent between 2005 and 2019, while emissions increased at a CAGR of about 4 percent. This would appear to underscore India’s relative success in decoupling economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions, thereby reducing the “emission intensity” of its GDP and becoming a possible model for the world in general and the Global South in particular.

Leading India’s determination to be part of the global solution to climate change, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced in November 2021, during the UN Climate Change Conference, COP26, in Glasgow, Scotland, a five-point climate-action plan for India, called Panchamrit. It included the key commitment of achieving net-zero emissions by 2070, and four goals to help achieve this, which were later incorporated into India’s nationally determined contributions to the international efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

These goals are: 500 gigawatts of non-fossil fuel power generation by 2030; 50 percent of India’s power requirements met by renewable energy by 2030; reduction of total projected carbon emissions by 1 billion tonnes by 2030; and a reduction of the economy’s carbon intensity by 45 percent by 2030 compared with 2005.

Many of these goals upped the already significant targets India had set for itself following COP21 in Paris in 2015. This increased ambition was possible because India had achieved its nationally determined contributions well ahead of time.

In fact, with regard to the use of non-fossil fuel resources for energy, India achieved its goal of 40 percent of cumulative electrical power installation capacity provided by non-fossil-fuel-based energy sources in 2021, nine years ahead of the target of 2030. Furthermore, between 2017 and 2023, India added about 100 gigawatts of installed electrical capacity, of which about 80 percent was attributed to non-fossil-fuel-based resources. Now, the share of non-fossil-fuel-based resources in installed electricity capacity has reached 45.4 percent.

India also met its key initial target of a 33 percent reduction in the emissions intensity of GDP by 2030, compared with the 2005 level, in 2019, 11 years early.

Aside from the four goals of its Panchamrit pathway, India has also undertaken to create a carbon sink that can handle an additional 2.5-3 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent, through the provision of additional forest and tree cover by 2030. So far, the country has created carbon sinks with a capacity of about 1.97 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent, putting it on track to achieve this nationally determined contribution.

Through its ambitious policies, successful renewable-energy growth trajectory and achievement of international commitments, India has strongly demonstrated climate leadership at a global level.

With climate change seen by many as the defining challenge of our time, India has assumed a pivotal role in the efforts to tackle the issue, both in terms of its actions and as the leading voice of the Global South on sustainability.

• Manjeev S. Puri is the former ambassador of India to the EU and lead negotiator at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.


Kosovo voters cast ballots in a second attempt this year to elect a government and avoid more crisis

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Kosovo voters cast ballots in a second attempt this year to elect a government and avoid more crisis

PRISTINA: Voters in Kosovo cast ballots on Sunday in an early parliamentary election in hopes of breaking a political deadlock that has gripped the small Balkan nation for much of this year.
The snap vote was scheduled after Prime Minister Albin Kurti’s governing Vetevendosje, or Self-Determination, party failed to form a government despite winning the most votes in a Feb. 9 election.
The deadlock marked the first time Kosovo could not form a government since it declared independence from Serbia in 2008 following a 1998-99 war that ended in a NATO intervention.
The prime minister’s party is again the favorite in the race, but it is unclear whether it will manage to muster a majority this time in the 120-member parliament, after other mainstream parties refused an alliance.
According to Kosovo’s election laws, 20 parliamentary seats are automatically assigned to ethnic Serb representatives and other minority parties.
Another inconclusive vote would further deepen the crisis. Kosovo has already not approved a budget for next year, sparking fears of possible negative effects on the already poor economy in the country of 2 million people.
Lawmakers are set to elect a new president in March as current President Vjosa Osmani’s mandate expires in early April. If this fails too, another snap election must be held.
The main opposition parties are the Democratic League of Kosovo and the Democratic Party of Kosovo. They have accused Kurti of authoritarianism and of alienating Kosovo’s US and European Union allies since he came to power in 2021.
A former political prisoner during Serbia’s rule in Kosovo, the 50-year-old Kurti has taken a tough stand in talks mediated by the European Union on normalizing relations with Belgrade. In response, the EU and the United States imposed punitive measures.
Kurti has promised to buy military equipment to boost security.
No reliable pre-election polls have been published. Kurti’s party at the previous election won around 42 percent of the votes while the two main rival parties had together around 40 percent.
Analysts say that even the slightest changes in numbers on Sunday could prove decisive for the future distribution of power but that nothing is certain.
Tensions with restive ethnic Serbs in the north exploded in clashes in 2023 when scores of NATO-led peacekeepers were injured. In a positive step, ethnic Serb mayors this month took power peacefully there after a municipal vote.
Kurti has also agreed to accept third-country migrants deported from the United States as part of tough anti-immigration measures by the administration of President Donald Trump. One migrant has arrived so far, authorities have told The Associated Press.
Kosovo is one of the six Western Balkan countries striving to eventually join the EU, but both Kosovo and Serbia have been told they must first normalize relations.