Reforming Global Climate Finance: India’s Leadership and the Road Ahead

Context:

  • During its G20 Presidency, India highlighted deep structural flaws in the global climate finance architecture, which remains rooted in 20th-century multilateral frameworks.

  • The editorial argues that without systemic reforms, climate finance will remain inadequate to meet the needs of the Global South, even as climate impacts intensify.

  • India has positioned itself as a key voice advocating equity, transparency, and innovation in climate finance governance.

Key Highlights:

India’s Climate Finance Vision

  • Prime Minister Narendra Modi has consistently stressed the need for:

    • Transparent tracking of climate finance and technology flows

    • Fair support for developing countries

  • India needs $467 billion by 2030 to decarbonise key sectors.

  • India’s net zero target of 2070 will require over $10 trillion in cumulative investment.

  • Global climate finance needs exceed $7 trillion annually.

Domestic Efforts and Innovations

  • Over two-thirds of India’s climate finance is domestic, sourced through:

    • Public budgets

    • Sovereign green bonds

  • India is developing a Climate Finance Taxonomy to:

    • Define what qualifies as green investment

    • Enhance credibility, consistency, and investor confidence

  • Regulatory bodies such as Reserve Bank of India and Securities and Exchange Board of India are:

    • Developing disclosure and accountability norms

    • Strengthening oversight of green financial instruments

Detailed Insights:

  • The current global climate finance system is criticised for:

    • Hollow commitments and unmet pledges

    • Opaque accounting practices

    • Prioritising creditor interests over climate vulnerability

  • Institutions such as:

    • Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs)

    • Green Climate Fund (GCF)

    • Global Environment Facility (GEF)
      face challenges of:

    • Concentrated decision-making power

    • Weak accountability

    • Complex access mechanisms for developing countries

  • India advocates MDB reform to:

    • Go beyond lending public money

    • Mobilise private capital at scale

    • Support adaptation, resilience, and Loss & Damage financing

  • Blended finance, guarantees, and risk-sharing instruments can:

    • De-risk private investments

    • Channel funds to high-risk, high-need regions and sectors

  • Global reform priorities should include:

    • Transparent climate finance accounting

    • Democratised governance across MDBs

    • Innovative debt restructuring and resilience finance tools

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

GS Paper 2 – International Relations

  • Global climate negotiations

  • Role of India in multilateral reforms

  • North–South equity in climate action

GS Paper 3 – Economy & Environment

  • Climate finance mechanisms

  • Green investments and sustainable growth

  • Role of financial regulators in climate governance

Prelims Focus

  • Definitions: Climate finance, Green bonds, MDBs

  • India’s net zero 2070 target

  • Climate finance figures and institutional reforms

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