IMPOSITION OF NET ZERO
EMISSION GOAL ON INDIA
Are we expecting too much from India?
courtsey:matmatch |
Abstract
India is a developing nation consisting
1.3 billion people of the world due to this increasing population demand
for energy is also accelerating .However the energy generation in India mainly
consists of traditional coal plants which finally result into the carbon
emission in the world .In this paper we are going to find the impact of
greenhouse gases in the world and the difficulty of India in committing itself
to net zero carbon emission goals .However India should not to take decision by
pressure from the developed country rather it has firstly look its own domestic
demand and need of the country which is more important for India .The developed
country which has started destroying the natural resources much before India
have no right to blame third world country for commitment towards nature the
decision should be made voluntarily. India itself and despite India’s non
commitment to any voluntarily committed itself the inclusion of green energy
and completed its goals ahead of its target time .India as one of the country
that is working very well on its course to achieving its voluntary goals to
mitigate the climate change (UNEP ‘Emission Goal Report’ 2014),also we will
discuss the achievements and future goal of India’s renewable energy green
whether it is in the field of wind energy solar energy hydel energy
electric vehicles subsidies and its promotion . And finally we will see the
possible outcomes which India can adopt in future at the global as well as
domestic level which will be beneficial for both and the decision should be
made by the cooperative efforts of the state govt. and the government
organizations with prior consultation.
Keywords: GHG Emission, Net zero Emission,
Paris summit ,COP26 , Renewable Energy, Climate change.
Introduction
Net Zero Emission doesn’t mean that
there will be zero GHG emission from the country but it means that the total
carbon emitted by country will be balanced by absorbing total carbon emission
by planting trees or by using other method .Take for example we are filling the
tub with water but at the same time we are taking water from the tub that means
the amount of water in the tub will remain constant and they will not be any
extra space for water. In the similar way if we will absorb the total amount of
carbon we emits then it is called Net Zero Carbon Emission.
As India is a developing country
putting its efforts in the development and growth of its nation by elevating
poverty, providing health benefits, improving sanitation, digital
education ,eliminating gender gap etc. . Also India is the second most populous
country in the world after china and includes 65% of its population below the
age of 35 makes it the highest young populated country in the world(Basu,
Kaushik. 25 July 2007).By increasing youth population there is an urgent
requirement for job for their livelihood and the employment demands industry to
be setup in India.The western/developed countries being as a frontrunner in the
pace of globalisation and they can do efforts towards green energy and neutral
carbon emission goal, but how can they expect it from the country whose 22%
population is below poverty line which have increased to 28% due to Covid-19
crisis(MoRD’s ‘Poverty measurement in India’ report 2020). Despite these there
has been consistent force coming from the developed nation which eagerly wants
India to commit itself to net zero carbon emission targets ASAP. Carbon
Emission is not only a concern of one country but it is a matter of concern for
the whole world and also the remedy to tackle this problem should be taken by
all efforts. However it is also a matter of concern when certain countries
blames only third world countries for the carbon emission .The developed
countries should join hand with developing countries by financial inclusion in
promoting green energy this could eventually benefits both the countries .India
is the second most populous country after china started its industrialisation
much later than western countries thanks to devastating colonial rule which
ruled India for 200 years, also destroyed and looted India for their own
benefits .India have started its journey from zero and at present India is the
fastest growing economy 12.55% and sixth largest economy in the world .(IMF
World Economic Outlook , April 2021).
The
growth and development of a country depends on certain areas like
industrialisation ,employment generation, health , education , ease of living ,
hunger eradication, poverty alleviation programme and
for this to attain, there needs to be investment and
industrialisation in the country . India’s industry has
been consistently putting its efforts in the development of India
whether it is manufacturing, steel and iron , IT ,automobiles, food processing
industry etc.
India
itself is one of the severe countries which suffered most due to the
climate change whether it is flood , cyclone, heavy rainfall, melting glaciers
, cloud bursts, drought, habitat loss , crop damage etc. India itself
acknowledged the effects of carbon emission. India has warmed up 0.7 degrees
during 1901-2018. The decade 2010-2019 was the hottest with the mean
temperature 0.36 degrees higher than average. (MoES, 2021.)India has also
suffered most expansive climate disastrous like cyclone Amphawan and heaviest
monsoon rainfall which cases flooded in the Deccan region which cost more than
USD13 billion dollars and loss of 1600 lives(UN’s “The state of the Global
Climate report 2020).It was the India’s heaviest rainfall in the last 25 years
and the world’s seventh costliest .(IMD’s Assessment 2021).In early 2021 India
suffered two more cyclones: cyclone Taukatae hitting the west coast and cyclone
Yaas from the east .Assessment by the MoES shows that India may experience a
4.4 degree rise by the end of this century ( khasru S. ,24 sept2021).
Impact of Greenhouse Gases on Environment
The report published by Intergovernmental panel
on climate change (IPCC) assessment report 2021 from working group 1- ‘Physical
Science Basis’ recently is an alarming call for climate action. It is one of
the most expensive scientific reviews on the impact of climate change. This
report was released on 9Aug 2021 by the efforts of 234 scientists from 66
countries and produced a 3949 page report (UN News Report 2021). The report
discussed five shared socioeconomic pathways for the future. The five scenario are:
(a)Very Low GHG emissions ,where CO2
emission will become net zero by 2050.
(b)Low GHG Emissions ,where the
emission of carbon dioxide will be net zero by 2075.
(c) Intermediate GHG Emissions , where
CO2 level will be present at the current level till 2050 and then falling but
not at a level of zero by 2100.
(d)High GHG Emissions ,where the
emission of CO2 will double by 2100.
(e)Very High GHG Emissions, where the
CO2 emission will triple in 2075(IPCC 6th assessment report 2021).
Sea level rise is mainly caused by the
expansion of warm ocean water , melting glaciers and the melting of ice sheets
and according to this report the Global mean sea level rose by 0.2m between
1901 to 2018. In the last century sea level rose mainly by the thermal
expansion of warm water but in this century , ice sheets and melting of
glaciers are the main contributors.GMSL is expected to be 0.19m in 2050 and
0.44m by 2100 in a low GHG Emissions scenario. In the very high emissions
scenario, GMSL will rise to 0.23m in 2050and will increase 0.77m in 2100.
According to the UN Environment programme Emissions gap report, the temperature
of the earth will increase by 3°c in this century which is double than Paris
agreements goals ,there is deep uncertainty in sea level projection for warming
above 3°C (Byravan S. , 2021).
India is consistently working to reduce
its greenhouse gases emissions ,and tries to achieve its goal of global
temperature less than 2°c , also India have pledged to cut the emission
intensity of GDP by 33% by 2030 over the 2005 level but India never supported
the binding commitment towards carbon neutrality (Krishnan A. 2021).
Coal accounts for close to 70% of
electricity generation. (IAE’s India Energy outlook 2021). To reduce the heat
temperature which caused by the emission of GHG India have to detached itself
from the conventional methods of energy generation and it have to adopt
renewable energy for electricity generation which is not an easy task to do and
includes the shifting of whole infrastructure and ecosystem,but India is
praised by some for its renewable target: scaling up power from renewable such
as solar and wind to 450GW by 2030. (G.Ananthakrishnan, 2021).
Nations are blaming each other for their
history as emitters and now they are forcing developing nations to reduce their
emissions which is discriminatory in nature. But as we know India itself is
struggling with emission problems for instance Out of 30 most polluted cities
in the world 22 are from India and Delhi is the most polluted capital in the
world(World Air Quality Report 2020).The people who are residing in delhi are
severely affected by this pollution as the AQI reaches sometime more than 600
,while the safe limit is below 50.
India ranks third in greenhouse gases
emission by emitting annually around 2.6 (Bt)CO2 . after China (10Bt) and USA
(5.4 Bt CO2). Russia(1.7Bt CO2) is at fourth place and Japan(1.2Bt CO2 ) on
fifth position , but if we compare the emission on per capita basis
India’s per capita emission is very low just (1.8tonnes ) which is lower than
world average of 4.4 tonnes and USA has the highest per capita emission of
(15.24tonnes) (Global Carbon Atlas 2021).
If we see emissions per unit of
GDP, of the top five absolute emitters. China ranks first with 0.486 kg per
2017 ppp $of , Russia being at second position of 0.411per 2017ppp $ of GDP.
India is merely above the world average(0.26kg) and produces 0.27kg, while the
USA is at 0.25. and Japan at 0.21 .but in terms of climate affected country
India ranks 7th which is 69bn dollars in terms of
ppp.(Germanwatch,2021).India committed to “reduce emission intensity of its GDP
by 33to 35 percent by 2030 from 2005 level” (unfccc 2020).
Sector-wise
global emissions reveals that electricity heat production, agriculture,
forestry produces 50 percent of the total emission of India. Energy sector
contributes 44% , Manufacturing sector contributes 18% and agriculture,
forestry and land use generates 14% and the remaining are the contribution of
transport, industrial process and waste sectors. Agriculture’s emissions
have gradually declined from 28 percent in 1994 to 14 percent in 2016. However,
in absolute terms, Emissions from agriculture have increased to about 650 mt
CO2 in 2018, which is similar to China's emissions from agriculture.
The livestock sector is the primary
contributor(54.6%) in the Agriculture Sector in the form of methane emissions
by the use of nitrogenous fertilizers in agriculture soils(19%) which emit
nitrous oxide . Rice cultivation alone shares (17.5%) of emission followed by
livestock management (6.9%) and burning of crop residues contributes
2.1%.(Gulati and thangaraj ,2021)
Difficulties of India in adopting net zero emission:
India being the third highest
contributor of greenhouse gases (2.6bn tonnes) have to work very hard to reduce
this ranking .India has the fourth largest coal reserves in the world and it
fulfills it 50% energy demand by using coal .Around (1.3bn) 18% of global
population resides in India and due to the increasing population the demand for
energy is also increasing day by day. India which consists 2.7 % of global land
with a per capita income as low as $2100 .Yet India is on track to reduce its
carbon footprints. India would need to generate at least 83% of its electricity
from (non-hydropower) renewable energy sources by 2050, if it were to commit to
achieving net zero emissions by mid century (CEEW).
Arunabha Ghosh CEO, CEEW, said in
a statement:
“India
has already demonstrated climate leadership and is the only G20 nation on track
to surpass its Paris Agreement targets. However, if India were to announce a
net-zero target, it must choose a year that not only minimizes climate impacts
but also gives it enough space to develop. Achieving net-zero emissions by 2050
or 2060 would need rapid systemic changes across all sectors and sections of
society. This, in turn, would require significant international financial
investments and technological transfer from or technology co-development with
the developed world”.
Another significance of Net Zero
Emission is that NZE is one of the basic principles of 2015 Paris
Agreement — “common but differentiated responsibility”. This requires developed
and richer countries to take responsibility for the emission done by them in
the period of Industrialisation in their country. Linked to this is the concept
of climate justice, which underlines that the devastating impacts of the crisis
will not be borne out equally by the rich and poor. (Nandi J.,2021).
Shyam Saran, former special envoy and
chief negotiator on climate change, said:
“For India… it is important that mitigation does not overshadow other
key elements of the Paris Climate agreement… The consequences are already upon
us and even with the most ambitious mitigation action, will the world since
greenhouse gases accumulated in the earth’s atmosphere diminish only gradually.
Adaptation should have equal billing with continued impact
mitigation.”
India also has to adopt national
level policy to promote organic culture which is the second highest contributor
of carbon emission in India .A carbon policy for agriculture must aim not only
to reduce its emissions but also rewards farmers through carbon credits which
should be globally tradable . With the world’s largest livestock population
(537 million) (19th livestock census figures, pib.gov.in).India
needs policy for cattle protection which also causes carbon emission .
courtsey:civilsdaily |
India’s efforts in reducing green house gases :
India’s total emissions in 2019
were 132 million tonnes of carbon dioxide which have been on the decline
for the first time in forty years (N Jayashree, 2020).Renewable energy (solar,
wind, and biomass power) accounted for over 24% of India’s total installed
electricity capacity as of July 2020(Central Electricity Authority 2020).India
total non- fossil fuel energy constitutes 38% of the country’s installed
capacity. Renewables are growing faster than fossil fuels with the share of
renewable energy capacity increasing from 13% to 24% (36 GW in July 2015 to 88
GW in July 2020). While thermal power still be the major source for power
supply but the share of thermal capacity declined by 8%, from 70% to 62% (192
GW thermal capacity of 276 GW total installed capacity in July 2015 as compared
to 231 GW thermal capacity of 372 GW total installed capacity in July
2020(Central Electricity Authority 2020). While the Indian government
recognizes the need to expand efforts for creating an “additional carbon sink”
of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent. India’s forest and
tree cover has increased by only 5,188 km2 , yielding a 42.6 million tones
carbon sink increase (MoFCC 2019).
courtsey:dailypioneer |
India’s commitment to address climate
change did not emerge from the coming up of the UNFCCC or the Paris Agreement .
The Age Old tradition and the customs of this country acknowledged the
importance of nature and environment and always respected the environment
and promoted prosperity along with them . Therefore India despite having
no binding mitigation obligation India declared a voluntary goal of reducing
the emission intensity of its GDP by 20-25% over the 2005 level by
2020(Lakshman P. 2020)
The government estimated that there
will be 238GW of coal capacity in 2027. An earlier draft of NEP doesn't have
any plans to increase the production of coal before 2022 ,apart from 59GW which
has already been built. India has to abandon the new coal fired plants to
achieve its goal of 1.5°C (CAT 2021).
India cultivated rice on its 44 million
hectares land which is the other culprit of methane emission especially in the
irrigated tracts of north west India in states like punjab,haryana .While
direct rice and alternative wet and dry practices can reduce the carbon
footprint in rice fields , the real solution lies in switching the areas from
rice to maize or other less water demanding crops .In this context ,opening up
corn for ethanol can help not only reduce our huge dependence on the crude oil
but also reduce the carbon footprints .(Gulati & Thangraj, 2021).
India’s Paris Agreement Targets
The Paris Agreement during the 21st
session of Conference of parties (COP21) of United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) approved by 196 countries in the year
2015 . The goal of Paris Agreement is to limit global temperature
rise to well below 2°C and to make best efforts to hold warming to 1.5°C. Countries
as part of the Paris Agreement submitted Nationally Determined Contributions
(NDCs) detailing plans to cut emissions to meet the global temperature goal
(UNFCCC “The Paris Agreement” Aug 28 2020). India ratified the Paris Agreement
in 2016, India’s pledge lays out a comprehensive approach to limit climate
impacts while fostering economic growth. India’s pledge includes the following
commitments:
• To put forward and further propagate
a healthy and sustainable way of living based on traditions and values of
conservation and moderation.
• To adopt a path that is
climate-friendly and cleaner than the one followed hitherto by others at a
corresponding level of economic development.
• To reduce the emissions
intensity of its GDP by 33 to 35% by 2030 from 2005 level.
• To achieve 40% cumulative
electric installed power capacity from non-fossil-fuel energy sources by 2030
with the help of technology transfer and low-cost international finance
including support from the Green Climate Fund.
• To create an additional carbon
sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent through additional
forest and tree cover by 2030.
• To better adapt to climate change by
enhancing investments in development programs in sectors vulnerable to climate
change, particularly agriculture, water resources, the Himalayan region,
coastal regions, health, and disaster management( mea.gov.in ,Govt. Of India).
India’s Achievements
after Paris Summit.
India has done tremendous efforts from
2015 to fulfil its goals. In almost every sector the government is working to
reduce the emission and aims to promote green and clean energy whether it is
automobile sector, industrial, manufacturing sector, energy generation etc.
India is also applauding all over the world for its efforts to reduce the climate
change.
Renewable Energy
India has committed to achieve
175 GW of renewable energy by 2022,under which 100 GW will be obtained from
Solar Energy ,60GW from Wind ,10GW from biomass and 5GW from small
hydropower(pib of India, MoNRE 2019).In 2019, India increased its target to 450
GW renewable Energy by 2030 which is five times the present installed
renewables(IEA, “India 2020 Energy Policy Review).India declared a
non-fossil goal of 220 GW at the 2020 International Solar Alliance Summit; this
target includes large hydro, nuclear, and renewable(The Economics Times, Sept
08 2020).As of July 2020, India have completed 50% of its 175 GW by 2020
target, with renewables (including solar, wind, small hydro, biomass
cogeneration, and waste to energy) reaching 88 GW, representing 23.5% of
India’s total installed capacity(CEA 2020). The National Solar Mission aims to
install 100 GW of solar energy by 2022, and a long-term goal to install
450 GW of renewable energy by 2030(pib.gov.in Aug 2020).While these goals are
appetent, India’s solar energy potential is enough for the estimated 750GW
(India Environment Portal Aug 14 2020). India’s solar energy capacity increased
to 35 GW as of July 2020(CEA, Aug 20 2020). 2.1GW solar energy was also added
in FY20 , which was 24% less than the targeted 3 GW(ET Energy world April23
2020). Despite the higher growth in recent years, the solar market is
facing challenges from COVID-19, such as disrupted supply chains, labour
availability constraints, and reduced power demand(Energy Economics Times, Aug
6 2020). The solar industry have to face multiple challenges with safeguard
duties on solar modules, manufacturing, safeguard duties, land availability,
the uncertainty of power purchase agreements, and outstanding dues from
distribution companies that have slowed solar capacity additions as a result
the output is always Lower than the expected one(P. Sanjay, May 2020). Solar
energy tariffs have reached their lowest point in July 2020 at `2.36
($0.0316)/kWh. Solar park Corporation Tecnologica ,an Spanish Company had the
lowest bid for a 2 GW project in Karnataka (Carbon Copy, July 2020). If we
compare it to the thermal power tariff ,the lowest thermal power tariff by a
three-company bid was 3.26 ($0.0436)/kWh in February 2020(S. Singh ,The
Economics Times Feb 2020).The tariff on solar has been increased to 20% to
30% (IEEFA ,Feb 2020).India took encouraging steps in increasing
its renewable power supply in May 2020(Nihar Gokhale The Wire, Aug 06
2020). India remains one of the most attractive markets for renewable
energy (Bloomberg New Energy, Emerging Markets Outlook 2019).India despite
having high borrowing Costs and limited subsidies India has been successful in
driving down the cost of solar.
source:saur energy international |
Wind Energy
India is on the track to achieve its
aim to install 60 GW of wind energy by 2022 including 55 GW of onshore wind and
5 GW of offshore wind. With nearly 38 GW of installed capacity, India is the
fourth largest market for wind energy, as of July 2020(CEA, July 2020). Out of
the total installed power capacity of India only 10% is produced by using Wind
Energy. However India has doubled its installed wind capacity from 2015 to 2020,
increasing by 14 GW(CEA July 2020). But it is also true that the wind energy
market in India has slowed because of unsustainably low tariffs, resulting from
policy shifts in the feed-in tariffs (FiT) to reverse auctions and tariff
caps(Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis Feb 2020).There are
some time delayed in this projects for instance the first 1 GW offshore wind
project in the Gulf of Khambhat in Gujarat has been delayed and may relocate to
Tamil Nadu(Energy Economics Times Aug 6 2020).There is uncertainty to achieve
offshore wind target of 5 GW by 2022(R. Katyal Nov 2019).Yet the path of growth
and development of Wind energy in India is optimistic with an estimated
700-1500GW of onshore wind energy and estimated 70 GW from offshore wind
potential.
image through:scroll.in |
Vehicle Emissions Standards
The BSVI vehicular and fuel
emission Standards has been adopted by India as part of its Auto Fuel. Also,
India now has ultra-low sulfur fuel (10 ppm) which is in use all over the
country. The BS VI emission norms for 2-wheelers are also among the most
drastic in the world. The BSVI will reduce 40% of PM emission and 43% of NOx
emission as compared to BS IV emission standards (S. Sharma Aug 20 2020). Real
Driving Emission (RDE) testing will be implemented by 2023 across the country
to prevent the use of cheating devices and regulate vehicle emissions.
source:Mint |
Only less than 1% ; 246,000 electric
vehicles (EV) sold in 2020 , that’s why India ramped up its investment in
electric vehicles with the policy of FAME-II which provides 10,000 crore($1.4
billion) for charging facilities, Infrastructure , battery manufacturing and
providing subsidies(National Mission on Transformative Mobility and storage
,March 2019). Expanding over three years from 2019 to 2022, FAME-II will
provide incentives and subsidies to promote the electric vehicles (EV) and
market penetration of electric public buses, four wheelers , commercial three
vehicle and privately owned two-wheelers and to provide infrastructure
for charging facilities. In addition, the scheme requires half of the vehicle
parts to be locally developed in India to promote indigenous development
(MoHIPE 2020). The National Electric Mobility Mission Plan 2020 aims to subsidize
the cost and facilitate the sale of 6 to 7 million hybrid and electric vehicles
over five years (MoHIPE “National Mobility Plan 2020”).To strengthen battery
storage, the National Mission on Transformative Mobility and Battery Storage is
also introduced to support the battery and EV component manufacturing which
will made charging facilities to everyone. (NDRF report “The Road from
Paris : India’s progress towards its climate pledge” Sept 2020)
India’s
Commitment in Glasgow (COP26), 2021
Recently, on the summit of Conference
of Parties 26 (COP26) in Glasgow, (Scotland).PM Narendra Modi has announced
that India will become a net zero carbon emission country by 2070. Also in this
meeting India has committed itself and the world five goals known as “Panchamrit”
which are as follows:-
1. India will increase its non-fossil
energy capacity to 500GW by the year 2030
2. India will become net zero carbon
emission country by 2070
3. India will meet its 50% of energy
requirements from renewable by 2030
4. Reduce its carbon emission by 1 million
tonnes from now to 2030
5. Reduce economy’s carbon intensity to
less than 45% by 2030.
As we know India is
one of the leading countries in the field of generating renewable energy. In
2014 India total renewable Energy capacity was only 20GW but India decided to
scale this up to 100GW by 2022, at that time the cost of solar power was
Rs16/unit which has been reduced to only Rs2/unit. At Glasgow PM also announced
to increase the renewable energy to 500GW in 2030 from 450GW target India’s
initiated International Solar Alliance which is progressing continuously. India
also talked about Climate Justice and demanded 1 trillion dollars from
developed countries for investment in green energy by developing countries
(P.Javadekar ,3Nov 2021).
But critics put out
some disappointments from India at Glasgow Announcement, they are as
follows:
India didn’t commit
itself to the group of countries who pledged to end deforestation by
2030.
India didn’t talk about
the NDC target for forest and tree cover.
India didn’t take a
pledge on reduction of methane emission which is the second most abundant gas
responsible for greenhouse
gases.·
India has also changed its earlier stand in which it decided to not obliged itself to cut emissions but now it is contributing to cut emissions.·
Many senior officers
shows their unlikelihood towards India high targeted
goals.(visionias.net)
Conclusion:
Amid increasing pressure from
various countries and organisations India should not bind itself to the net
zero emissions target which it cannot fulfil within a given time. India has to
look into their domestic sphere and try to find out the possible results which
can be beneficial for India and the world. India has been always prefers the
motto of the Vasudeva Kutumbakam i.e. all world is one family but it is also
necessary for India to first focus on its own country because eventually it is
the people of India who has to suffers in the last .India acknowledges the
importance of the climate change which is catastrophic to India as well as the
whole world ,but the economic crisis is also the thing which can cause a lot of
trouble for the country’s subjects as we have seen in the covid 19 times that
millions of people lost their livelihood jobs and force to migrate into their
hometowns . acc to an estimate this joblessness pull 20million people into
below poverty line which India gain by improving their life in 70 years
.Despite this India have done a tremendous works in the field of green energy
and reducing its carbon share in the global level however it is not the end and
India should decrease its dependence on the coal for electricity generation and
opt out for better renewable method like solar ,tidal ,wind and nuclear energy
which will reduce the carbon emission in India . As of January 1 India has 221
gigawatts (GW) of operating coal plants. This is the world’s third largest
fleet, with 11% of global capacity, according to the global coal plant tracker
(BP Statistical energy 2020, Chart).India nowadays plays an important role in
global programmes however the commitment to any target on the global level
should be properly discussed in the domestic sphere in the benefit of the
masses of the country and being as a sovereign country India can choose its
option whether it has to commit net zero emission or not. There should also be
the participation of all the state governments in setting goals and the
development and the economy of the country should also be kept in mind. Climate
change could not be solved by the efforts of some developed or some developing
countries but it should be tackled by the cooperation of all the nations of the
world.
Technically, India can ignore this demand of net zero
by saying that it has already taken significant steps in decarbonising its
existing energy system. Also it has increased its ambition of renewable energy
generation capacity to 450 GWs by 2030 and has achieved renewable penetration
of about 38% in terms of capacity and 10% in demand. The real problem or issue
in adopting a net zero goal lies in political and economic constraints .Net
zero in the energy system is doable in the long-run, but economically
challenging. 2070 is a dateline whose validity depends on four factors — high
penetration level of renewables in the energy system, high level of
electrification of energy grids, introduction of cost-effective green
hydrogen-based economy, and biomass based biofuel production at scale. There is
also another dimension. Despite these measures, there will still be a
sufficient amount of carbon left in the
system that we have to move to artificial ways of carbon removals continuously
at a massive scale. There is no getting away from this; scientists know it well(RR.
Rashmi 2021).
As we know, India also has recently committed itself to the net zero emission goal by 2070 however there was consistent pressure from other nations and they looked at India with hope as India being the third largest emitter should also have to adopt net zero goal by 2050. However, critics believed that India should not have committed net zero goals so early and also on committing higher goals that may not be fulfilled.
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Informative Article.
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