Context:
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At COP30 in Belém, Brazil, India announced plans to strengthen institutional mechanisms for accessing global climate finance.
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The initiative responds to long-standing challenges faced by developing countries in mobilising, coordinating, and disbursing climate funds for mitigation and adaptation.
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India’s move aligns with broader Global South demands for simpler, predictable, and equitable climate finance flows.
Key Highlights:
Government Initiative / Policy Details
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India, along with 12 other countries and an African regional alliance, will establish a national platform for climate and nature finance.
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The platform will be coordinated through the Green Climate Fund (GCF).
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Objective:
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Create a single, coordinated national interface for climate finance
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Replace fragmented, project-wise approaches
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Data, Targets, Schemes Mentioned
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Green Climate Fund (GCF):
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Established in 2015
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$19 billion committed globally as of 2024
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Only ~25% disbursed, due to:
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Complex approval procedures
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Capacity constraints in recipient countries
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India’s GCF portfolio (as of August 2024):
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11 approved projects
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Total value: $782 million
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Key sectors:
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Water and sanitation
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Clean and renewable energy
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Urban and transport infrastructure
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Stakeholders Involved
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Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC):
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India’s National Designated Authority (NDA) for GCF
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Green Climate Fund Secretariat
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Developing countries and regional alliances
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Multilateral climate negotiators at COP30
International Negotiations and Policy Push
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Developing countries, including India, are pressing for:
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Greater focus on climate adaptation, not just mitigation
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Easier access to concessional finance
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India is advocating focused negotiations on:
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Article 9.1 of the Paris Agreement, which mandates:
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Developed countries to provide financial resources
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Support both mitigation and adaptation in developing nations
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Parallel discussions underway to finalise indicators for the:
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Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA)
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Proposal to adopt around 100 indicators at COP30 to track adaptation progress
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Operational Significance of the Country Platform
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Expected benefits:
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Better project pipeline development
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Faster approval and disbursal
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Improved coordination between:
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Central ministries
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States
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Implementing agencies
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Aligns national development priorities with international climate finance architecture.
Significance / Concerns
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Positive outcomes:
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Enhances India’s ability to fund large-scale adaptation projects
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Strengthens negotiating position at global climate forums
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Challenges remain:
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GCF’s slow disbursal record
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Need for institutional capacity-building at sub-national levels
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Ensuring adaptation finance reaches the most vulnerable communities
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
GS 3 – Environment & Ecology
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Climate finance and adaptation strategies
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Global climate institutions and funding mechanisms
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Sustainable development and resilience building
GS 2 – International Relations
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North–South climate negotiations
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Paris Agreement obligations
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India’s leadership role at COP platforms
GS 2 – Governance
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Institutional mechanisms for climate action
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Centre–State coordination in climate finance
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Public finance management for climate goals
Prelims Focus:
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Green Climate Fund (GCF)
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Article 9.1 of Paris Agreement
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Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA)
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COP process
Mains Orientation:
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Discuss the challenges faced by developing countries in accessing climate finance and evaluate India’s proposed national platform approach.
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Examine the role of the Green Climate Fund in supporting climate adaptation in developing countries.
