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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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Union Bank of India First Major Bank to Sign PCAF

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The Union Bank of India has become the first major Indian bank to sign the Partnership for Carbon Accounting Financials (PCAF).

The bank has demonstrated its commitment to monitoring and controlling its financed emissions, which is crucial for its climate risk management strategies.

The PCAF methodology will also enable the bank to establish objectives and create action plans in line with international climate goals.

The RBI framework:

This action is also in line with the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) recently released draft guidelines on climate risk disclosures. These cover the increasing emphasis on climate risk management in the world.

The framework requires information on four main areas to be disclosed by regulated entities:
i. metrics and targets
ii. risk management
iii. strategy
iv. governance.

The RBI’s proposed guidelines indicate a change in direction for Indian banks’ climate risk reporting requirements.

Given the effects of climate change and changing regulations, the financed emissions, or Scope 3 emissions have the potential to exceed a bank’s operational emissions and pose serious risks to the bank’s portfolio.

PCAF gaining ground in India:

As of August 2024, over 500 financial institutions are signatories to the Partnership for Carbon Accounting Financials (PCAF).

PCAF is a global coalition of financial institutions that work together to develop standards for assessing and reporting greenhouse gas emissions

In India, the IDFC First Bank and Union Bank of India are the two signatories to PCAF. To further support the market, PCAF has recently announced its first accredited regional partnership in the Global South with with StepChange, an enterprise sustainability platform in India.

“The Indian market is a vital part of the global economic eco system, so we are both delighted and proud to be supporting financial institutions in the market as they begin to implement GHG accounting journeys. At PCAF, we are committed to ensuring that the Standard is applicable and viable for markets in all parts of the world and we will be working with financial institutions in India and other parts of the Global South to ensure the methodology remains inclusive,” said Angélica Afanador, Executive Director, PCAF, at a recent event in the country.


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Indian Sustainable Agriculture Projects on Global Centre Stage

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Two sustainable agriculture projects, one led by a farmer’s collective and supported by an NGO, and the other, an individual scientist have won the Gulbenkian Prize for Humanity 2024.

In the first case, Andhra Pradesh Community Managed Natural Farming (APCNF) received the Gulbenkian Prize for Humanity for contributing to natural farming and sustainable agriculture, and community development.

The reward is in recognition of APCMNF’s contribution to global food security, climate resilience, and ecosystem protection.

APCNF:

APCNF supports smallholder farmers to switch from chemically intensive agriculture to natural farming, through practices such as using organic residues and minimizing tillage to improve soil health; reintroducing indigenous seeds; and diversifying crops, including trees.

The initiative was launched by Andhra Pradesh Government to find a sustainable solution to farmer distress caused by economic crises in agriculture and climate change. Implemented by non-profit organization Rythu Sadhikara Samstha (RySS) (‘Farmers Empowerment Cooperation’), it is recognized as the world’s largest agroecology program. It now reaches over a million smallholder farmers, predominantly women, across 500,000 hectares in the state.

According to a press release, the program has generated environmental and social benefits including greater soil carbon sequestration, reversed land degradation, reduced soil temperatures, increased biodiversity.

The four levers of success:

APCNF initiative’s success relies on four levers:

• Delivery through an established network of women collectives
• Farmer-to-farmer learning via ‘Champion Farmers’
• Progressive technology
• Government ownership

The program aims to reach all eight million farmer households in Andhra Pradesh over the next 10 years and inspire replication elsewhere. The model is already being incubated across 12 states in India, and in 2024 will be introduced in five other Global South countries, adapted to local contexts.

Dr Rattan Lal:

The second award recipient, Dr Rattan Lal is a globally renowned soil scientist.

He pioneered a soil-centric approach that harmonizes food production with ecological preservation and climate change mitigation.

His methodologies have highlighted on a on a global stage the interconnectedness of soil health and broader environmental and human wellbeing, and the importance of enhancing food security while conserving natural resources.

By promoting research and education in sustainable soil management, Dr Lal has advanced understanding of sustainable agriculture and climate resilience.

SDGs:

Food is central to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the United Nations’ development agenda for the 21st century.

The second of the 17 SDGs aims to “End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote sustainable agriculture.” Reaching this goal by the target date of 2030 necessitates international collaboration for a sustainable transformation of the global food and agriculture system.

Jury notes:

Dr. Angela Merkel, President of the Jury, who announced the awards, said, “Access to high-quality food is of existential importance to everyone. Climate change and the resulting global warming have led to an increase in extreme weather events and are endangering food security around the world. This presents everyone engaged in the agriculture sphere with particular challenges. This year’s winners have demonstrated in an exemplary fashion how climate-resilient and sustainable food systems can be developed and put into practice.”

António Feijó, President of the Board of Trustees of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation said, “… Each winner has demonstrated exceptional commitment to transforming agricultural practices, proving that sustainable models can thrive in diverse and challenging environments. Their work also demonstrates the co-benefits of sustainable agriculture for communities as well as the planet. We believe their stories will inspire others to apply similar approaches in other regions and help us build a sustainable future for all.”


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