India’s GHG Emission Reduction and Sustainable Development

India has made voluntary commitment for reducing the emission intensity
of GDP in the year 2020 by 20–25 % below that in the year 2005. The Indian
approach is based on delineating and implementing cost-effective mitigation
actions which can contribute to national sustainable development goals while
remaining aligned to the UNFCCC’s expressed objective of keeping the average
global surface temperature increase to below 2 C over the preindustrial average.
This chapter assesses three emission scenarios for India, spanning the period
2010–2050. The analysis is carried out using a bottom-up energy system model
ANSWER-MARKAL, which is embedded within a soft-linked integrated model
system (SLIMS).
The central themes of the three scenario storylines and assumptions are as
follows: first, a business-as-usual (BAU) scenario that assumes the socioeconomic
development to happen along the conventional path that includes implementation
of current and announced policies and their continuation dynamically into the
future; second, a conventional low carbon scenario (CLCS) which assumes imposition,
over the BAU scenario, of CO2 emission price trajectory that is equivalent to
achieving the global 2 C target; and third, a sustainable scenario that assumes a
number of sustainability-oriented policies and measures which are aimed to deliver
national sustainable development goals and which in turn also deliver climate
mitigation, resilience, and adaptation as co-benefits. The sustainable low carbon
scenario (SLCS) also delivers same cumulative emissions from India, over the
period 2010–2050, as the CLCS scenario using carbon price as well as a mix of
sustainability-oriented policies and measures.
The scenario analysis provides important information and insights for crafting
future policies and actions that constitute an optimal roadmap of actions in India
which can maximize net total benefits of carbon emissions mitigation and national
sustainable development. A key contribution of the paper is the estimation of the
net social value of carbon in India which is an important input for provisioning
carbon finance for projects and programs as an integral part of financing NAMAs. The analysis in the paper will be useful for policymakers seeking to identify the
CO2 mitigation roadmap which can constitute an optimal mix of INDCs for India.

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Authors:P. Shukla, Subash Dhar
Status:Published
Published year:2016
Content type:Book chapter
File: Download
DOI:Visit
Orbit ID:638ab8bf-243a-47f2-a578-224801d67a36
Publisher:Springer
Is current:Current