Syllabus
India is currently the third largest carbon emitter in the world, behind the US and China.
In order to facilitate the achievement of more ambitious climate change targets and ensure a faster transition to a low-carbon economy, the government is seeking to strengthen a 20-year law, called the Energy Conservation Act of 2001, which has powered the first phase of India’s shift to a more energy-efficient future.
The Bill to amend the Energy Conservation Act, 2001 –
Importantly, the amendment Bill seeks to widen the scope of energy conservation to include large residential buildings as well. Till now, the energy conservation rules applied mainly on industrial and commercial complexes.
At the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) summit in November 2021, India promised to reach zero carbon emissions by 2070 and reduce its emissions by one million tonnes in the next 10 years. Establishing a carbon credit market is the first step toward this goal.
Carbon Emission (CE)
Emission reductions and removals are converted into tradable assets through a carbon market. This implies that an industrial unit that surpasses the emission criteria is eligible to receive credits. Additionally, it would allow struggling units to purchase credits and demonstrate compliance.
Under the Kyoto Protocol, the predecessor to the Paris Agreement, carbon markets have worked at the international level as well.
Case Study: In California, US imposes a limit on the volume of greenhouse gases that can be generated by a specific industry or area of the economy. The amount of metric tonnes of carbon dioxide that businesses can emit is then allowed. Businesses that pollute less than their allotted amount can sell the excess to other companies, encouraging everyone to reduce emissions more quickly.
Global experience suggests that carbon pricing is initially introduced in high carbon-intensive sectors such as power, and then its scope is extended to other carbon-intensive sectors, such as cement and metals, over some time.
Carbon markets will also open up new horizons for companies engaged in developing/consulting/trading carbon credits. On the other hand, it will be detrimental to the prospects of coal-based power generation capacities and Coal India’s growth ambitions.
Any emission reduction is a step closer to tackle global warming and carbon trading scheme helps in the same.
The carbon trading market revolves around the presence of:
(a) permissible threshold limits of CE for each industry,
(b) market players’ success at decarbonisation, reducing CE to below threshold levels, and/or attained lower net CE by investing in carbon sequestration or afforestation,
(c) polluting/inefficient market players whose CE exceeds the permissible threshold levels, and
(d) pricing mechanism that acts as an incentive for sale of credits by efficient market players and purchase of credits by inefficient market players.
Hence, it is to be hoped that the carbon trading policy including the permissible threshold limits in each industry are carefully crafted to meet the twin objectives of growth and quality of life.
A report from Deloitte Economics Institute highlights that India must act now to prevent the country from losing $35 trillion in economic potential over the next 50 years due to unmitigated climate changes. The report also reveals how the country could gain $11 trillion in economic value over the same period by limiting rising global temperatures and realising its potential to export decarbonisation.
Indian companies have already been participating in the global carbon market. This is done through one of three modes — carbon neutrality, Renewable (RE 100), and Science Based Targets (SBT).
Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) of the Kyoto Protocol
The Perform, Achieve and Trade (PAT) Scheme is a programme launched by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) to reduce energy consumption and promote enhanced energy efficiency among specific energy intensive industries in the country.
According to the government, the scheme has led to energy savings of about 17 million tonnes of oil equivalent and resulted in the mitigation of about 87 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year. A tonne of oil equivalent is the amount of energy released by burning a tonne of crude oil.
An analysis by the Centre for Science and Environment (CSE), a Delhi-based a public interest research and advocacy organisation, however, found that the scope of these reductions could have been far greater if industries were given higher targets and the scheme were implemented more thoroughly. For example, in the thermal industry, the CSE found that energy savings were only 3 per cent of the industry’s total annual emissions.
India is no stranger to carbon credits, which it has accumulated through participation in Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) projects. The strong experience in CDM projects has helped India develop projects that qualify for Voluntary Carbon Credits. However, compared to developed markets like the US, Voluntary Carbon Credits market in India is still in its infancy.
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