Context
- A decade after the Paris Agreement, the climate crisis has intensified, especially in South Asia, which faces recurring floods, heatwaves, landslides, glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) and rising sea-level threats.
- The geopolitical environment is increasingly fractured — weakened multilateralism, diluted climate commitments, and trade protectionism.
- As the COP30 Special Envoy for South Asia, consultations were held across Bhutan, Nepal, Maldives, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh to identify common priorities for negotiations at COP30 (Brazil).
Key Highlights
- Implementation Gap: Achilles Heel of Climate Action
- Large gap persists between promises vs. delivery in climate action and finance.
- Only 65 countries have submitted enhanced NDCs.
- CEEW study: Out of 203 global initiatives (post-2015), only ~5% achieved intended outcomes.
- Need for:
- Stronger regional forums (G-20, BIMSTEC, BRICS).
- Inclusive governance: subnational bodies, women, local communities.
- Cross-border tech-transfer & knowledge-sharing.
- Expansion of initiatives like CDRI (India) & Sagarmatha Sambaad (Nepal).
- Adaptation at Par with Mitigation
- South Asia will see 200 days >35°C annually by 2100 (ADB estimate).
- Region-specific risks:
- Nepal – GLOFs
- Maldives – coastal submergence
- India – heatwaves
- Sri Lanka – water stress, drylands
- Need for:
- Adequate technical + institutional + financial support.
- Locally-led adaptation integrated with scientific innovation.
- Consensus on Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA) indicators that are simple, flexible, non-punitive.
- Trust Deficit with Developed Countries
- Broken climate finance promises, delayed actions, diluted NDCs.
- Developed nations not on track for their 2030 NDC targets.
- Need for:
- Fulfillment of past pledges.
- New ambitious NDCs aligned with 1.5°C pathway.
- Reinforcement of multilateralism.
- Climate Finance: Predictable, Adequate, Fair
- Climate finance must be:
- Predictable (long-term)
- Adequate (balanced between mitigation & adaptation)
- Accessible (low transaction cost)
- Non-debt inducing (grants, concessional loans)
- The Baku to Belém Roadmap to $1.3 trillion must specify who delivers, how much, by when.
- Need for:
- Tripling adaptation finance.
- Regional allocations from GCF, Adaptation Fund, Loss & Damage Fund.
- Creation of a South Asian Resilience Finance Facility.
- Non-State Actors as Engines of Scale
- Need active participation from:
- Subnational governments
- Private sector (mobilizing finance)
- Civil society (independent monitoring)
- Youth (innovation, urgency)
- Academia + Businesses (mainstream sustainability)
- A regional knowledge compendium for traditional & modern adaptation practices.
- Technology Flows & Digital Innovation
- South Asia remains cut off from global climate tech flows.
- Only 1 in 3 initiatives focus exclusively on Global South regions.
- Need for:
- Blended finance, debt-for-nature swaps.
- AI, big data, DPI, blockchain, remote sensing for climate cooperation.
Relevant Prelims Points
- Paris Agreement (2015) → Limit warming to well below 2°C, strive for 1.5°C.
- NDCs → National climate commitments updated every 5 years; currently only 65 countries submitted enhanced versions.
- South Asia risks:
- Heatwaves (India)
- Glacial lake outburst floods (Nepal)
- Coastal submergence (Maldives)
- Water stress (Sri Lanka)
- Key Organisations:
- CDRI (India) – global coalition for resilient infrastructure.
- Sagarmatha Sambaad (Nepal) – dialogue on mountain vulnerabilities.
- GCF, Adaptation Fund, Loss & Damage Fund – major climate finance facilities.
- Baku to Belém Roadmap – pathway to mobilising $1.3 trillion in climate finance.
- Locally-Led Adaptation (LLA) – endorsed globally but underfunded.
- GGA (Global Goal on Adaptation) – currently under negotiation.
Relevant Mains Points
Climate Governance Challenges
- Fragmented global order, weakened multilateralism.
- Lack of trust due to broken climate finance promises.
- Withdrawal of major emitters undermines global processes.
Why South Asia Needs Leadership Role
- Home to ~2 billion people.
- Highest climate vulnerability: from Himalayas to Indian Ocean.
- Experience in disaster management → moral authority to push for decisive action.
Climate Finance Issues
- Need for:
- Predictable, transparent finance.
- Grants over loans.
- Focus on adaptation (currently only ~20% of total flows).
- Importance of a regional facility to pool finance and accelerate resilience projects.
Technology Access
- Global South disproportionately excluded from clean-tech transfer.
- Requires:
- Open-source climate technologies.
- Regional innovation hubs.
- Cross-border green grids & sharing platforms.
Role of Non-State Actors
- Critical for:
- Scaling climate solutions.
- Monitoring transparency.
- Mobilizing youth and local communities.
- Businesses can integrate circular economy & sustainability across supply chains.
Way Forward
- Build mutual clarity, mutual cooperation, mutual implementation.
- Institutionalize regional platforms under BIMSTEC, SAARC revitalization, BRICS+.
- Ensure ambitious but realistic NDCs with clear timelines.
- Push for equitable climate finance distribution.
- Encourage South Asian climate tech innovation using DPI & AI.
- Elevate adaptation to equal priority with mitigation.
