Context:
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Tamil Nadu has emerged as a pioneer in sub-State climate action, adopting district-level decarbonisation plans to achieve Net Zero emissions well before India’s national target of 2070.
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The editorial highlights Tamil Nadu’s approach as a template for decentralised climate governance, aligning economic growth with sustainability.
Key Highlights:
Net-Zero Ambition & Emissions Performance
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Tamil Nadu aims to achieve Net Zero emissions before 2070.
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GHG Inventory (2005–2019) shows:
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Nearly 60% reduction in emission intensity to GDP.
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Contribution of only 7% to India’s total emissions in 2019, despite being among the most industrialised States.
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Renewable Energy Leadership
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Renewable energy capacity:
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~60% of total installed power capacity
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~30% of total electricity generation
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Strong presence of wind and solar power, reducing dependence on fossil fuels.
District-Level Decarbonisation Plans
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Pilot districts: Nilgiris, Coimbatore, Ramanathapuram, Virudhunagar.
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Plans aim to:
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Abate up to 92% of projected emissions by 2050
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Integrate local socio-economic and ecological contexts.
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Key interventions:
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Clean energy transition
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Low-carbon mobility
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Industrial energy efficiency
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Nature-based solutions
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Carbon sequestration potential:
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~3 million tonnes of CO₂ equivalent by 2050.
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District-Specific Emission Profiles
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Nilgiris & Coimbatore: Road transport as the dominant emission source.
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Virudhunagar: Cement industry and industrial energy use.
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Ramanathapuram: Public electricity generation and rice cultivation (methane emissions).
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Tailored strategies ensure place-based climate action.
Institutional Framework for Climate Governance
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Climate coordination led by Tamil Nadu Green Climate Company (TNGCC) through missions such as:
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Tamil Nadu Climate Change Mission (TNCCM)
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Green Tamil Nadu Mission (GTNM)
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Tamil Nadu Wetlands Mission (TNWM)
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Tamil Nadu Coastal Restoration Mission (TN SHORE)
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Emphasis on whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach.
Nature-Based Solutions & Biodiversity
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20 Ramsar-designated wetlands, among the highest for any Indian State.
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30% of total land area under protection.
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Initiatives include:
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Large-scale afforestation
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Mangrove restoration
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Wetland and coastal ecosystem revival
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Community participation central to conservation and low-carbon transition.
Significance of the Tamil Nadu Model
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Demonstrates:
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Effectiveness of sub-national climate leadership
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Integration of development, livelihoods, and climate resilience
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Provides a scalable model for:
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Other Indian States
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Federal climate action aligned with India’s NDCs
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Key Concepts Involved:
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Net Zero: Balancing greenhouse gas emissions with removals.
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GHG Inventory: Accounting of emissions by sector and region.
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Ramsar Convention: Global treaty for wetland conservation.
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Decentralised Climate Governance: Localised planning and implementation of climate action.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
GS 3 – Environment & Ecology
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Climate mitigation and adaptation
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Renewable energy transition
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Nature-based solutions
GS 2 – Governance
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Sub-national climate action
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Cooperative and competitive federalism in climate policy
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Role of institutions in sustainability governance
Prelims Focus:
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Net Zero targets (India vs States)
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Ramsar wetlands in India
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GHG inventories and emission intensity
Mains Enrichment:
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Discuss how district-level climate planning can strengthen India’s climate commitments.
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Evaluate the Tamil Nadu model as an example of decentralised and inclusive climate governance.
