
India’s much-delayed 2035 climate plan underestimates the country’s clean energy potential and allows for an acceleration of emissions growth, according to analysts. The plan aims to reduce the emissions intensity of its GDP by 47% from 2005 levels and increase the share of its electricity capacity from nonfossil sources to 60% by 2035.
The reduced carbon intensity target would, however, still allow India’s carbon emissions to increase by 70% over the next decade if GDP grows at a target rate of 7% per year, Lauri Myllyvirta of the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air told Semafor. That would translate to emissions growth of 5.5% per year, above the average rate of 3.5% over the past decade.
India is also on track to achieve its clean power capacity target well ahead of time: Its Central Electricity Authority projects that nearly 70% of power capacity will come from nonfossil sources by 2035-36.
“India’s booming clean energy industry is highly likely to deliver much faster progress than policymakers were prepared to commit to,” Myllyvirta said. Disruptions to oil and gas flows caused by the Iran war and the competitiveness of clean energy could strengthen the case for accelerating renewable deployment.
latest_posts
- 1
New 'People We Meet on Vacation' trailer teases Poppy and Alex romance: Everything we know about the new Netflix movie - 2
Nitty gritty Manual for Picking Agreeable Tennis shoes - 3
Nutrient Rich Natural products: Lift Your Wellbeing - 4
Katz, IDF: We assassinated IRGC intelligence chief Majid Khademi - 5
Green Inflections: A Manual for Inside Plants
Instructions to Upgrade the Mechanical Highlights of Your Shrewd Bed for a Superior Night's Rest
A whale stranded at a Baltic Sea resort has swum off a sandbank. But it isn't safe yet
Figure out how to Keep up with Your Dental Inserts for Long haul Achievement
Artemis II astronauts are more than halfway to the moon as they seek to break Apollo 13's record
Iran’s Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi backs protests: Join your fellow citizens in the streets
The Specialty of Compromise: Examples from Reality
She's been a Bond girl and a mutant. Now she's grappling with Hollywood's obsession with 'eternal youth.'
As her kidneys fail and time runs short, this activist fights to decriminalize euthanasia in Mexico
Quantum Computing’s Next Major Breakthroughs Could Come From Australia













