India’s Promise to Achieve Carbon Neutrality

Date:

Share post:

PIB Delhi – At the Conference of Parties (COP) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the final outcomes are in the form of various decisions agreed to by consensus of all the Parties following extensive negotiations. The decisions carry varying degrees of commitments and responsibilities of Parties ranging from the purely voluntary or invitation to consider to the fully mandatory. Such decisions also carry caveats and exemptions under the principles of the Convention and the Paris Agreement, especially the principles of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities & Respective Capabilities in the light of different national circumstances, as applicable to developing countries. Based on the exact text of decisions in the light of these principles, India undertakes such actions as appropriate in fulfilment of its responsibilities.

Under the terms of the Paris Agreement, the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and Long-Term Low Emissions Development Strategy(LT-LEDS) are determined by countries themselves and communicated to the UNFCCC. In keeping with this, India has submitted its updated NDCs on 26th August 2022 and its long-term low carbon development strategy on 14th November 2022.These documents lay out India’s vision and approaches towards reaching net-zero by 2070, which are expected to evolve as necessary over time. As per LT-LEDS, India’s vision of low carbon development is based on the need to ensure India’s high energy needs for development, including poverty eradication, achieving Sustainable Development Goals and economic growth. Further, it is necessary that the plan for the country’s energy security is based both on the expansion of non-fossil fuel sources for power generation and rational utilization of fossil fuel resources. Specific steps for such utilization include, inter alia, expanding renewables and strengthening the grid and focusing on demand-side management. This information was given by the Minister of State for Environment, Forest & Climate Change, Ashwini Kumar Choubey in a written reply in Rajya Sabha today.

Daily News Bulletin

Nurturing Creativity – Keekli Charitable Trust, Shimla

Keekli Bureau
Keekli Bureau
Dear Reader, we are dedicated to delivering unbiased, in-depth journalism that seeks the truth and amplifies voices often left unheard. To continue our mission, we need your support. Every contribution, no matter the amount, helps sustain our research, reporting and the impact we strive to make. Join us in safeguarding the integrity and transparency of independent journalism. Your support fosters a free press, diverse viewpoints and an informed democracy. Thank you for supporting independent journalism.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related articles

Samarth and Tejasvi Head to Asian Short Track Ice Skating Trophy

Himachal Pradesh has another reason to celebrate as two promising young ice skaters, Samarth Attri and Tejasvi Kuthiala,...

This Day In History

1918 Nelson Mandela’s Birth: Nelson Mandela, the anti-apartheid leader and former President of South Africa, was born in Mvezo,...

रामपुरी जातर में गूंजा संस्कृति संरक्षण का संदेश

प्रदेश के शिक्षा मंत्री रोहित ठाकुर ने रविवार को जुब्बल में आयोजित तीन दिवसीय जिला स्तरीय रामपुरी जातर...

JUIT Celebrates 25 Years, Awards 2,244 Degrees

Governor Kavinder Gupta on Friday presided over the 7th Convocation of Jaypee University of Information Technology (JUIT), Waknaghat,...