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India Working on International Cooperation to Empower Global South

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India is focusing on international cooperation to empower the global south, according to Bhupender Yadav, Union Minister for Environment, Forests, and Climate Change (MoEFCC).

He said that the country is assessing financial requirements at COP29 to achieve new quantifiable goals.

He said climate finance needs to be defined appropriately in order to support capacity building. To increase capacity, the Ministry of Energy has proposed the idea of a carbon market and launched the Green Climate fund, the minister who recently led a plenary discussion on India’s Road to Net-Zero Emissions, said.

He said, “The path of sustainability has to be chosen for conservation of ecosystem, biodiversity, development of society and for best utilization of human resources. To ensure sustainability, a proper technological and management system has to be created for the world through policy, technological intervention, and capacity building.”

India has significantly reduced its carbon emissions, despite facing challenges such as its unique topography.

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Mr Yadav said that though India constitutes 17% of the world’s population, it only contributes 5% of emissions worldwide. By contrast, in developed nations, 17% of the population accounts for 60% of emissions. He said, “India has made great strides toward lowering carbon emissions, even in the face of obstacles like its uneven terrain.”

Nations should create action plans with equity as a top priority, making sure that everyone has access to prosperity, justice, and health, Mr Yadav said. He said that this strategy will protect natural resources for future generations, advance social justice, and enable inclusive, sustainable economic growth.

He said that India is the only G20 nation to have met two of the three quantitative nationally determined contributions (NDCs) targets of the Paris Agreement nine years ahead of schedule under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

According to the minister, private sector involvement will be essential to bolstering renewable grids, creating low-carbon technology, and handling demand-side problems to meet the net-zero goal by 2070.

“It is necessary to use fossil fuel resources sensibly and carefully, to develop integrated, effective, and inclusive low-carbon transportation systems, and to build sustainable urbanization that takes into account ecological, economic, and inclusive factors,” he said.

The government is pushing for green hydrogen technology, fuel switching, recycling, the circular economy, he said. He said that the focus is also on bio-based policy interventions to strengthening the MSME sector.


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Global leaders emphasise the need for sustainable finance at WSDS

Sonal Desai


Global leaders at the recently concluded World Sustainable Development Summit (WSDS) emphasised the need for sustainable finance to fuel green growth.

The speakers emphasised the lack of new instruments to facilitate long-term lending to fuel green growth, particularly in emerging economies and least-developed countries.

Among the speakers, here’s a round-up of what six key global leaders said at the summit.

“Though renewable energy has received adequate funding, areas such as climate adaptation, sustainable consumption and production, biodiversity, ecosystem integrity, and pollution abatement have not received the necessary funding”: Dr Vibha Dhawan, Director General, The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI)

“Finance is central to combating climate change. The central question here is whether we can transform the global financial system to meet today’s challenges in ways that promote low-carbon, resilient growth”: Manish Bapna, President Natural Resources Defence Council, India

“ADB is currently developing innovative financing models to facilitate the transition to clean energy by financing the retirement of coal-fired power plants and repurposing them to provide renewable energy and grid services, as well as lending to countries to develop climate change policies”: Dr Pradeep Tharakan, Regional Advisor, South Asia, Asian Development Bank (ADB)

“Facilitating climate finance and diversifying the fiscal base to support green growth should lead the priorities list. Capacity building should be prioritised to achieve the necessary transformational change. Both national and sub-national finance ministries must boost their capacity with tools like green budgeting and carbon tax and pricing”: Helen Clarkson, CEO, The Climate Group

“We need three things: a vision of what we want to do, an inter-institutional framework to do what we want to do and leadership”: Laszlo Broberly, state counsellor to the prime minster of Romania

“Our recommendations on climate finance would be to expand the scope of climate finance and make climate smart transition of the financial sector overall,” according to the Green Development Pact. Also, rather than improving the resilience of existing infrastructure, let us build infrastructure that improves our resilience”: Jagjeet Singh Sareen, Principal, Dalberg Advisors

Source: ANI Press Release


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