Context:
India’s carbon emissions rose by only 0.7% in 2025, marking the slowest increase in over two decades, reflecting structural shifts in energy consumption.
Key Highlights:
- Clean Energy Transition
- Record addition of renewable energy capacity (solar, wind, hydro).
- Reduced dependence on fossil fuels like coal and oil.
- Demand-Side Factors
- Weak power demand due to economic conditions contributed to lower emissions growth.
- Slower industrial activity reduced energy consumption intensity.
- Comparative Trend
- Previous years saw 4%–11% annual growth (excluding pandemic year 2020).
- Indicates a decoupling of economic growth from emissions growth.
- Climate Commitment
- Aligns with India’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the Paris Agreement.
- Push toward net-zero target (2070) gaining traction.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Carbon Emissions: Release of CO₂ and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
- Clean Energy Sources: Solar, wind, hydro, biomass (non-polluting).
- Fossil Fuels: Coal, petroleum, natural gas — major contributors to emissions.
- India is the 3rd largest emitter globally, but per capita emissions remain low.
- Renewable Energy Targets:
- 500 GW non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030.
- Carbon Intensity Reduction Target:
- Reduce emissions intensity of GDP by 45% (by 2030 from 2005 levels).
Relevant Mains Points:
- Significance of Slower Emission Growth:
- Indicates progress toward sustainable development.
- Demonstrates effectiveness of renewable energy policies.
- Economic–Environmental Balance:
- Shows potential for green growth pathway.
- Supports argument that development need not be carbon-intensive.
- Challenges:
- Continued dependence on coal for baseload power.
- Need for energy storage and grid modernization.
- Balancing industrial growth with emission reduction.
- Global Implications:
- Strengthens India’s position in climate negotiations.
- Highlights role of developing nations in climate mitigation.
- Way Forward:
- Accelerate renewable energy deployment and storage solutions.
- Promote energy efficiency across industries.
- Strengthen carbon markets and green financing.
- Enhance climate-resilient infrastructure and policies.
UPSC Relevance:
- Prelims: Definitions (carbon emissions, clean energy), targets, NDCs.
- Mains (GS-3): Climate change mitigation, energy transition, sustainable development.
