Tepid promises: On India and non-fossil capacity
India came in late, but it was worth the wait. A section of the
Paris Agreement, under which all countries except the United States have agreed to keep temperatures from rising beyond 2°C of pre-Industrial times, requires updating their targets every five years from 2020. As of December last year, India and Argentina were the only two G-20 countries that had not announced updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) for 2035. This was despite India’s Environment Minister committing at COP30 in Brazil, in November 2025, to update by the ‘year-end’. The saving grace is that this happened in time before Financial Year 2025-26 ends in a week. The latest set of NDCs by India commits to, by 2035, an installed electric capacity that is 60% from non-fossil sources; reducing, by 47%, the intensity of emissions per unit of GDP and having a 3.5 billion tonne-4 billion tonne CO
2 carbon sink. This is an update over India’s 2020 NDCs: of an installed electric capacity that is 50% from non-fossil sources; reducing, by 45%, the intensity of emissions per unit of GDP and having a 2.5 billion tonne-3 billion tonne CO
2 carbon sink. Thus, the necessary boxes have been ticked.
The EU has committed to a 40%-49% cut below 2005 levels. As a developing nation, India — a significant contributor of net emissions in recent years but below the world average in per capita emissions — will not cut annual emissions but promises to emit less carbon per unit of energy and source more of its power from non-fossil sources. It has also committed to being net zero by 2070 through increasing its tree and forest cover (which absorb CO
) and the recently announced technology pathways such as carbon capture, utilisation, and storage. India’s 2035 goals are easily achievable and the government has expressed that plainly. India already met its 2030 non-fossil target last year, with 52% capacity installed. The rub is that only about 25% of the power generated is non-fossil due to insufficient battery storage which is unable to harness all the available solar and wind power. The Power Ministry’s National Generation Adequacy Plan itself expects 70% of the projected installed 1,121 GW capacity by 2035-36 to be non-fossil. It is tempting to laud India for embellishing its green commitments amidst a war in West Asia that has squeezed supply of a vital fossil fuel. However, without actual improvements in generated supply, these numbers mean little. With the war demonstrating the chokehold that a fossil fuel has, India must exhibit more urgency toward enhancing battery storage and improving its electric grid to better utilise existing non-fossil capacity.
- 1India's updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for 2035, submitted under the Paris Agreement, commit to 60% non-fossil installed electric capacity and a 47% reduction in emissions intensity. This move, though delayed, signifies India's participation in global climate diplomacy and adherence to the Paris Agreement's five-year target update cycle. It underscores India's balancing act as a developing G-20 nation in international climate negotiations.
- 2India's government has updated its climate commitments for 2035, aiming for 60% non-fossil installed electric capacity, yet actual non-fossil power generation remains low at 25%. This disparity highlights a governance challenge in infrastructure development, specifically insufficient battery storage, preventing optimal utilization of existing solar and wind power. The Power Ministry's National Generation Adequacy Plan projects 70% non-fossil capacity by 2035-36, necessitating urgent policy focus on implementation.
- 3India's commitment to increased non-fossil energy capacity has significant economic implications, requiring substantial investment in battery storage and grid infrastructure. The current low actual non-fossil power generation (25%) despite high installed capacity (52%) impedes energy security and economic growth. Geopolitical events like the West Asia war underscore the economic vulnerability of fossil fuel dependence, urging faster transition and infrastructure development.
- 4India's updated NDCs target a 3.5-4 billion tonne CO2 carbon sink and 60% non-fossil installed electric capacity by 2035, aiming for net-zero by 2070. While these environmental goals are ambitious on paper, the challenge lies in actual emissions reduction, hindered by insufficient battery storage for renewable energy. Technologies like carbon capture, utilisation, and storage, alongside increasing forest cover, are crucial scientific pathways to achieve these environmental objectives.
Related from CLAT Tribe Blogs
- Operation Sindoor — CLAT Current Affairs Guide
Master Operation Sindoor for CLAT 2026, Phalgam attack, legal angles, IWT suspension, key persons, weapons used & 10 practice MCQs. Your complete GK guide.
