
THE 2024 general elections in India came at a time when the country faced T bouts of climate-linked adversities and challenges. Small wonder that climate change has entered the election manifestos of almost all the contesting political parties. The Bharatiya Janata Party has acknowledged the current shift in energy sources by declaring that it would continue to raise the share of renewable energy in the country's electricity mix. The Indian National Congress has pledged to set up a green new deal investment programme to promote the renewable energy sector and create green jobs, and an environment protection and climate change authority to enforce national and state climate action plans. Policymakers are also coming to terms with the fact that India's development must be in line with the reality of climate change.
The fact is that extreme and changing weather patterns, rising sea levels and soaring temperatures can undo a lot of development progress and economic growth achieved over the past decades; they can pose a serious threat to food security, spur a surge in disease outbreaks, fuel migration and even trigger conflicts. Thus, the new government has an arduous task of ensuring economic growth while tackling the effects of climate change. One way to achieve this is by ensuring transition to clean energy.
MOVE ON ENERGY TRANSITION
India has made great strides in the field of renewable energy, with non-fossil fuels, excluding nuclear power, making up 43.12 per cent of the total installed capacity, according to the India Climate and Energy Dashboard by Union government think tank NITI Aayog. Installed capacity of solar power has increased twelvefold in the past eight years, says data with the dashboard as on March 31, 2024. This means India is on course to secure 50 per cent of its power capacity from non-fossil sources by 2030-a commitment made under the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change.
Esta historia es de la edición June 01, 2024 de Down To Earth.
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Esta historia es de la edición June 01, 2024 de Down To Earth.
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THE GREAT FARM HUSTLE
Agroforestry is fast emerging as a win-win strategy to mitigate climate change and improve farmers' income. It is particularly so in India, home to one-fifth of the agroforestry carbon projects in the world. Over the past months ROHINI KRISHNAMURTHY has travelled to almost 20 villages across the country to understand how this market works. At all locations, she finds that communities and their land and labour are central to the projects. But they do not always benefit from the carbon revenue

CAN AGROFORESTRY CREDITS BE SAVED?
Ensure that farmers benefit from the carbon revenue and stay protected against market failure

Urban trap
Fearing loss of autonomy and access to government schemes, several villages across India are protesting against the decision to change their status to town

Dubious distinction
How Madhya Pradesh displaced Punjab as the country's leading state in stubble burning

TRADE TENSIONS
Why the benefits of agroforestry carbon trade do not trickle down to farmers

A fantastical lens
BIOPECULIARIS A LAUDABLE ATTEMPT TO CARVE A SPACE FOR SPECULATIVE CLIMATE FICTION WITHIN INDIAN LITERATURE. WHILE THE STORIES MAY NOT ALWAYS HIT THEIR MARK, THE ANTHOLOGY IS AN IMPORTANT STEP IN A GENRE THAT DESERVES MORE ATTENTION

Help on hold
US' decision to pause foreign aid could lead to hunger deaths, ruin economies of nations across Africa

Irrigation by snow
Declining rain and snowfall make farmers collect snow from higher altitudes to water their apple crops

Stem the rot
A fungal disease has hit the most widely sown sugarcane variety in Uttar Pradesh, threatening the country's sugar production

The mythos of ancient India's scientific excellence
Policymakers are obsessed by a fuddled idea of resurrecting a glorious civilisational past, and even IITs have fallen in line