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Climate Change Negotiations – UNFCCC, COP, Other Conventions and Protocols

India’ new climate targets are modest but significant

Why in the News?

India officially approved its third Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC 3.0) for the 2031-2035 period. This comes at a time when global climate leadership is weakening, especially with the US stepping back from clean energy financing and multilateral commitments. This is significant because India, despite being the third-largest emitter, is signalling continuity in climate commitment while many developed countries are retreating.

What are the exact targets under India’s NDC-3?

  1. Emissions Intensity Reduction: Ensures 47% reduction by 2035 (from 2005 levels); builds on 45% target for 2030 and 36% already achieved by 2020.
  2. Non-Fossil Electricity Capacity: Ensures 60% installed capacity from non-fossil sources by 2035; compared to 40% (Paris target) and ~52% achieved by Feb 2026.
  3. Carbon Sink Expansion: Ensures 3.5-4 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent sink, up from 2.5-3 billion tonnes target; 2.3 billion tonnes already created by 2021.

What were India’s early achievements under previous NDCs?

  1. Early Target Achievement: Ensures fulfillment of 33-35% emissions intensity reduction (2005–2030 target) by 2020 itself, achieving a 36% reduction, i.e., 11 years ahead of schedule, demonstrating policy credibility and implementation capacity.
  2. Renewable Energy Transition: Ensures achievement of 40% non-fossil fuel-based installed electricity capacity well before the 2030 deadline (achieved ~2021-22), reflecting accelerated deployment of solar, wind, and other clean energy sources.
  3. Enhanced Ambition: Strengthens climate commitment by revising emissions intensity reduction target from 45% (2030) to 47% (2035), building on early success and improved capacity.
  4. Carbon Sink Creation: Ensures creation of 2.29 billion tonnes of CO₂ equivalent carbon sink by 2021, progressing steadily towards the earlier target of 2.5-3 billion tonnes, through afforestation and ecosystem restoration initiatives.
  5. Afforestation and Livelihood Linkage: Supports rural livelihoods alongside climate mitigation through forest expansion, integrating environmental sustainability with socio-economic development.
  6. Global Recognition: Secures international validation, with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) ranking India 3rd globally in net gain in forest area and 9th in total forest area, highlighting effectiveness of conservation policies. 

Why are the targets termed ‘modest’ despite progress?

  1. Marginal Increase: Expands clean energy share from 52% to only 60% by 2035, indicating slow incrementalism.
  2. Under-commitment Strategy: Avoids overpromising due to uncertainty in finance and technology access.
  3. Comparison with Capability: Existing trajectory suggests India could achieve higher targets without formal commitment.
  4. Deliberate Caution: Prevents binding commitments that may constrain future policy flexibility

How has India overachieved its previous climate commitments?

  1. Early Emissions Reduction: Achieved 36% reduction by 2020, exceeding 33-35% target for 2030.
  2. Renewable Expansion: Rapid increase in solar and wind capacity pushed non-fossil share to ~52% by 2026.
  3. Carbon Sink Creation: Achieved 2.3 billion tonnes CO₂ sink by 2021, nearing earlier commitments.
  4. Policy Continuity: Maintains stable climate trajectory unlike abrupt reversals in other economies.

What global developments are shaping India’s cautious climate stance?

  1. US Retreat: Weakens global leadership in renewables and climate finance.
  2. Geopolitical Conflicts: Russia-Ukraine war triggered energy insecurity, increasing fossil fuel reliance globally.
  3. Supply Chain Disruptions: Pandemic exposed vulnerabilities in global manufacturing and logistics.
  4. Energy Nationalism: Countries prioritizing domestic fossil fuel security over climate commitments.

Why is climate finance the central constraint in India’s climate ambition?

  1. Finance Gap: Developed countries promised $300 billion/year post-2035, while developing nations demand $1.3 trillion/year.
  2. Implementation Barrier: Limits renewable expansion, storage infrastructure, and grid modernization.
  3. Equity Principle (CBDR): Requires developed nations to bear greater responsibility.
  4. Negotiation Deadlock: Failure at Baku COP29 to finalize adequate financing framework.

How does India use climate commitments as a strategic negotiation tool?

  1. Conditional Ambition: Links higher targets to availability of finance and technology.
  2. Diplomatic Leverage: Uses moderated commitments to push for fair global burden-sharing.
  3. South Leadership: Positions itself as the voice of developing countries.
  4. Forum Engagement: Raises concerns consistently in international platforms and negotiations.

What are the risks associated with India’s current climate strategy?

  1. Low Ambition Risk: May not align with the 1.5°C warming pathway.
  2. Fossil Lock-in: Continued reliance due to industrial growth and energy demand.
  3. Climate Vulnerability: India remains highly exposed to climate impacts despite mitigation efforts.
  4. Global Trust Deficit: Weak multilateralism reduces effectiveness of cooperative climate action.

How is India balancing development and climate responsibility?

  1. Development Priority: Ensures energy access and economic growth remain central.
  2. Gradual Transition: Avoids abrupt fossil fuel phase-out.
  3. Domestic Financing Shift: Increasing reliance on internal resources due to global finance gaps.
  4. Adaptation Focus: Expected emphasis in COP30 (Brazil) on resilience and adaptation strategies. 

Conclusion

India’s NDC-3 reflects a calibrated realism shaped by global uncertainty and domestic priorities. Sustained credibility through overachievement strengthens India’s position, but enhanced ambition depends on resolving finance and technology constraints.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2021] Describe the major outcomes of the 26th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). What are the commitments made by India in this conference?

Linkage: This PYQ tests understanding of global climate governance (COP26) and India’s NDC commitments, core to GS3 environment and international relations. It is directly linked to the article as India’s 2035 NDC targets (NDC-3) build upon and extend the COP26 commitments (Panchamrit), reflecting continuity and calibrated ambition.


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