Important questions for UPSC Pre/ Mains/ Interview:
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Context
India has submitted its updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for 2035 under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, in line with the Paris Agreement. These targets reflect a balance between climate ambition, energy security, and developmental priorities.
Q1. What are Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)?
- Definition: Country-specific climate action plans under the Paris framework
- Key features
- Voluntary and self-determined
- Updated every 5 years with increasing ambition
- Reflect national capabilities and constraints
- Principles guiding NDCs: Equity and CBDR-RC (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities)
Q2. What are India’s key NDC targets for 2035?
- Non-fossil energy capacity
- Target: 60% of installed capacity
- Current: ~52% (2025)
- Earlier target: 50% by 2030 (already achieved early)
- Emissions intensity reduction
- Target: 47% reduction (from 2005 levels)
- Current: ~36% reduction achieved
- Carbon sink enhancement
- Target: 3.5–4 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent
- Current: ~2.3 billion tonnes
Q3. How have India’s NDCs evolved over time?
- 2015: First NDC (Paris commitments)
- 2022: Updated targets for 2030
- 2026: New targets extended to 2035
- Reflects:
- Incremental ambition
- Alignment with Global Stocktake findings (world off track for 1.5°C goal)
Q4. What is the significance of India’s climate strategy?
- Global Leadership
- Positions India as a leader of the Global South
- Demonstrates commitment despite low historical emissions
- Development Balance: Integrates economic growth, energy access and climate mitigation.
- Strategic Autonomy: Targets are self-determined and not externally imposed.
Q5. What are the key pillars of implementation?
- Policy Framework
- National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC)
- State Action Plans (SAPCCs)
- Sectoral Initiatives
- Renewable energy expansion
- Sustainable agriculture
- Climate-resilient infrastructure
- Flagship Schemes
- Jal Jeevan Mission
- PM Krishi Sinchayee Yojana
- MISHTI (mangrove initiative)
- People-centric approach
- LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment)
- Mass participation campaigns
Q6. What are the key challenges and concerns?
- Ambition Gap: Targets seen as modest relative to current progress
- Capacity vs Generation Gap
- 52% capacity but only ~25% actual generation
- Due to intermittency of renewables
- Infrastructure Constraints
- Transmission bottlenecks
- Land acquisition issues
- Ecological Limitations: Forest cover (~24.6%) below 33% target
- Global Inequities: Developed nations are rolling back commitments and imposing carbon border taxes.
Q7. What measures are needed going forward?
- Renewable Ecosystem Strengthening: Grid modernisation, energy storage and green hydrogen.
- Improving Efficiency: Hybrid energy systems (solar + wind + storage)
- Carbon Sink Expansion: Agroforestry, urban forestry and community participation.
- Climate Finance: Access global funding and promote green bonds.
- Governance Reforms: Faster project approvals and stronger institutional coordination.
Conclusion
India’s 2035 NDCs represent a pragmatic escalation of climate commitments, balancing sustainability with development. While progress is notable, future success will depend on enhanced ambition, infrastructure readiness, and global cooperation, positioning India as a key actor in shaping an equitable climate regime.

