Joining the climate high table
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The Centre’s decision to ratify (make officially valid) the Paris Agreement on climate change on October 2 is a welcome affirmation (a declaration that something is true) of India’s commitment to join the global community in reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. As an emerging nation with a large number of people living without access to electricity, India’s predicament (a tight spot) of having to generate more energy for poverty eradication while simultaneously curbing (to check, restrain or control) GHGs is universally acknowledged. But there is no denying that the country has adopted an approach that is predicated on a much-too-high use of fossil fuel-based technologies.
This needs to be addressed as all nations look towards the next phase, when the climate agreement comes into force. There is near certainty that the decision made in Paris will become operational before the deadline for signatures set for April 2017: 61 country-parties responsible for 47.79 per cent of emissions have ratified it so far. What remains is for individual countries in Europe, and the European Union, to review their commitments after Brexit, and sign up to reach the target of 55 per cent of total GHG emissions. India’s decision to join, overcoming a reticence (reserve, quiteness) that was apparently linked to the failure to enter the Nuclear Suppliers Group, is commendable(deserving creditable) . It would, in any case, have come under pressure to do so since the Paris process is sure to move ahead with Europe’s entry.
With climate commitments becoming almost inevitable (impossible to avoid) , a national consultative process on low carbon strategies cannot be delayed. In order to comply with the Paris process, every aspect of energy use would need precise measurement in the years ahead, which several sectors of the economy are ill-equipped to do at present. Upgrading the electricity grid to take in higher volumes of renewable power is an urgent necessity if India is to realise the national goal submitted to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change to install 100 gigawatts of solar power capacity by 2022. A bold new policy on urban design to curb emissions from buildings and transport has to be written into all relevant legislation.
Such far-reaching steps can be taken only with the active participation of State governments, many of which remain on the periphery (outside boundary ; parts of surface of something) of the discussion. That needs to change, and a blueprint for action has to be drawn up, if a convincing case is to be made for assistance from the $100 billion a year that the rich countries are to put together by 2020. Fundamentally, national policy should mandate (an official command ; an order) even higher levels of taxes on fossil fuels and transfer the benefits to eco-friendly options, be it solar panels, efficient light bulbs, bicycles, green buses/trains, and greening initiatives.