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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.

Need an action plan:

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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COP29: Hope for Climate Mitigation and Climate Fund

Sonal Desai


COP29 in Azerbaijan is just three months away.

It is one of the most anticipated climate events in 2024.

More so because I am expecting action and actionable strategies from Baku, as against hollow promises in the past events.

There are couple of reasons, I am placing my bets on COP29:

1. Climate incidents have played global havoc. Disturbing climate incidents have displaced thousands of people as well as animals. The loss and damage are yet to be established.
2. The event has already sparked climate conversations. But more so because, the host country, Azerbaijan is taking the lead in mitigating climate action.

The country aims to reduce emissions by 40% by 2050 through climate mitigation plans, including gas-free power stations, renewable energy, and energy-efficient technologies. With these initiatives, Baku has set the ball rolling for member countries.

India, in particular, which has seen massive destruction because of increased natural disasters will be an active participant.

Here are some reasons why:

Till July 2024, India witnessed over 120 natural disasters ranging from cyclones, floods, flash floods, landslides, insect infestations, forest fires.

• The year 2023 has been the warmest year on record, with 1.48 degrees warmer than the pre-industrial average. The Centre for Science and Environment’s annual Anil Agarwal Dialogue revealed that 109 nations, including India, experienced extreme weather events in 2023, causing losses of 3,287 human lives, 2.21 million hectares, and 124,813 animal deaths.
• A World Bank Climate Change report predicts India’s average temperature to rise by 1.1-4.1°C by the end of the century, influenced by the 21st-century emissions pathway.
• The G20 Climate Risk Atlas highlights India’s already severe climate change impacts, predicting impacts up to 2050 and 2100 on various emission pathways.
• India faces severe climate impacts due to high emissions, with heatwave lengths increasing by 2,515% in 30 years, causing heat-related deaths 25 times higher than in 1990, destroying crops, and costing farmers 15% of income by 2050.
• Increased climate threats, including extreme heatwaves, hurricanes are interrupting the supply chain.

Grim picture?

IT CERTAINLY IS!

Even as the country limps from one tragic incident to normalcy, tragedy strikes another region with an equal or more devastating vigor. This is a continuing trend over the past few years with no solution in sight. Besides, every climate incident poses newer challenges.

WriteCanvas has consistently pointed out the ill effects of ignoring natural warnings (including climate change). I am hoping that the climate conversation at Baku is realistic. It just does not play on the lines of the previous COP editions that provide hope but no conducive solutions to mitigate climate change.

Climate finance at play:

The UNFCCC’s Standing Committee on Finance estimates that developing countries need $5.8-11.5 trillion by 2030 to meet their climate plans.

COP29 also aims to Paris Agreement goals including limiting global warming, adapting to climate change impacts, and mobilizing financing.

Experts augur that the faster India adopts low-carbon policies, it will face lesser climate impacts cascades. Limiting temperature rise to 2°C will see the cost of climate impacts in India drop to just 2% of its GDP by 2050 and 5.18% by 2100. At COP29, all eyes will be on ACT2025.

According to WRI, The Allied Climate Transformation (ACT) 2025 consortium is advocating for strong climate finance and support at COP29, focusing on 3.6 billion people in climate-vulnerable countries.

The consortium aims to meet the needs of developing countries and set an ambitious climate finance goal to support low-emissions economies. Climate-vulnerable nations face widespread devastation from climate change, and a lack of support for climate action is concerning.

The consortium’s Call to Action outlines concrete actions to support these countries, including setting an ambitious climate finance goal and ensuring quality finance, and accountability.

This will take into account the needs and priorities of developing country Parties, and will also include the operationalization of Article 6. Strengthening multilateral financial institutions and climate funds will contribute to creating an international enabling environment for success.

Debuting the New Collective Quantified Goal:

The UN climate conference in Baku will focus on the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG) to determine the new amount developed nations must mobilize annually to support climate action in developing countries starting in 2025.

Adopting the NCQG is crucial for the Paris Agreement. The COP29 Presidency aims to agree on an ambitious NCQG, considering the needs and priorities of developing country Parties, and facilitating transparency and accessibility.

The top negotiating priority is agreeing on a fair and ambitious NCQG on climate finance, considering developing country needs.

Strengthening multilateral financial institutions and climate funds, and mobilizing the private sector and philanthropy for climate action are also crucial in adopting the NCQG and implementing the Paris Agreement.

Our take:

COP29, we hope, will lay out actionable roadmaps for the pressing issues of Climate Fund mobilization and lack of action in the Paris Agreement. We also hope the world leaders align in their climate language, fast-tracking in actions, and accountability that measure impacts.


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COP29: Climate Talks Must be the Focus

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Commonwealth Secretary-General Patricia Scotland has emphasized the importance of COP29 climate talks in Azerbaijan.

In an interview with PTI, Scotland highlighted the need to bridge gaps in climate action and finance. She also pressed on the necessity to rebuild trust among countries and protect lives and livelihoods.

She spoke about the need for rich countries to provide more financial aid to help developing countries address climate change, as the target has not been fully met.

She advocated for increased cooperation between Commonwealth space agencies (CSA) for thorough data analysis and focused climate solutions. This includes reducing methane emissions, which can significantly affect global warming.

Scotland emphasized the need for COP29 host Azerbaijan to balance its role as a major fossil fuel producer with the global need for sustainable energy.

“We are nearing the cliff, the critical 1.5 degrees Celsius limit. In fact, some of our scientists say that we are there now. Our home, our planet, is literally on fire. Instead of action, we see the gaps in emissions, finance, and justice widening. It is our duty to bridge those gaps, and COP is our only chance. It comes at a moment of immeasurable urgency,” Scotland said in the interview.


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G7 Agrees to Coal Phase-Out

WriteCanvas News


Finally, there is a consensus among major forces regarding the coal phase-out of polluting fuel from energy generation. The recent G7 decision is considered as one of the key decisions in this regard.

The G7 Ministerial in Turin has agreed to phase out existing unabated coal power generation during the first half of the 2030s and make commitments to the COP28 deal.

However, the agreement fell short of making any new progress on the scaling up of climate finance. The agreement will be presented to G7 Leaders to sign off at a summit in June and sets the climate and energy agenda for the world’s most advanced countries.

Coal phase-out and NDCs:

The G7, responsible for 21% of global emissions, is under pressure to detail how they will respond to the outcome of COP28, which agreed to transition away from fossil fuels, triple global renewable capacity, double energy efficiency improvements, and unlock climate finance for low-income nations.

This year, governments are due to agree to a new climate finance goal at COP29 in Baku and prepare their national country climate plans (the Nationally Determined Contributions) ahead of a February 2025 deadline.

The G7 has agreed to measures to phase out inefficient fossil fuel subsidies, including promoting a common definition of inefficient subsidies and reporting progress towards phasing out inefficient subsidies by 2025 or sooner.

The agreement is likely to indirectly shape the Australian coal market, which accounted for 50% of the total coal imported by G7 countries in 2023.

The G7’s commitment to phase out domestic coal from its energy systems before 2035 ensures that the US and Japan will have a coal
phase-out date, though still several years delayed compared to its peers.

Questions remain on whether Germany will update its legal date 2038 in line with Scholz’s coalition government commitment of achieving coal phase out “by ideally 2030”. Japan has the highest share of coal in the G7 (32%), but is likely to argue that it is ‘on track’ to meet its own 2030 NDC.


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