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India Launches Climate Change Action
Plan
India released its national action plan on climate change
this week (30 June) with a focus on harnessing renewable energy
rather than stringent emissions targets.
India's prime minister Manmohan Singh released the plan ahead
of his attendance at next week's (79 July) G8 summit
in Japan where climate change is expected to be discussed.
The action plan spells out eight priority missions that will
promote India's development objectives, with the "co-benefit"
of tackling climate change.
The eight missions are: solar energy, enhanced energy efficiency,
sustainable habitats, water conservation, sustaining the Himalayan
ecosystem, developing a 'green' India, sustainable agriculture
and building a strategic knowledge platform on climate change.
"Over a period of time, we must pioneer a graduated
shift from economic activity based on fossil fuels to one
based on non-fossil fuels, and from reliance on non-renewable
and depleting sources of energy to renewable sources of energy,"
Singh said.
The missions will be managed by the appropriate ministries,
and specific programmes within the missions will be finalised
by December.
Of these, solar energy will receive a big thrust. India receives
the equivalent of about 5,000 trillion kilowatt hours of energy
from the sun each year 5.5 kilowatt hours per square
metre each year with most areas experiencing clear,
sunny weather for 250 to 300 days.
The solar mission aims to tap this natural resource and make
the country's solar energy industry as competitive as the
fossil fuel industry by setting up a new research centre,
entering into research collaborations and encouraging technology
transfer.
The plan does not spell out greenhouse gas emission targets,
but states that per capita emissions in India will not exceed
levels in industrialised countries. India is the world's fourth
largest emitter of greenhouse gases in absolute terms, but
lies behind the US and Europe in terms of annual per capita
emissions it (1.2 tonnes compared to 20 and 9.4 tonnes respectively).
The international environmental organisation Greenpeace,
said in a statement that the plan is a "welcome first
step" but has some weak areas that need to be addressed.
"The plan lacks clear policy prescriptions and targets
for improving energy efficiency and reducing transportation
emissions," Srinivas Krishnaswamy, policy advisor for
Greenpeace, India, told SciDev.Net.
"They should have placed more emphasis on mandatory
emission standards," he added.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date:4 July 2008

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