Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) – India’s Updated Climate Commitments Balancing Development and Decarbonisation

India has unveiled its updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for 2035 under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Nationally Determined Contributions
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Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) Latest News

  • India has unveiled its updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for 2035 under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), in line with its obligations under the Paris Agreement
  • These targets reflect a progression over earlier commitments and aim to reconcile climate ambition with developmental priorities and energy security.

Key Highlights of India’s 2035 NDC Targets

  • Expansion of non-fossil energy capacity:
    • Target: 60% of installed electricity capacity from non-fossil sources by 2035.
    • Current status: India already achieved about 52% (2025). Target was to achieve 50% by 2030.
    • Sources include: Solar, wind, hydro, biomass, nuclear.
    • Indication: Early achievement of 2030 target (50%), showcasing rapid renewable expansion.
  • Reduction in emissions intensity:
    • Target: 47% reduction in emissions intensity of GDP (from 2005 levels) by 2035.
    • Current progress: 36% reduction achieved (2005–2020) and the 2030 target is 45% reduction.
    • This reflects continued emphasis on energy efficiency and low-carbon growth.
  • Enhancement of carbon sink:
    • Target: 3.5–4 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent carbon sink.
    • Current progress: About 2.3 billion tonnes achieved by 2021 (2.5–3 bn tonnes to be achieved by 2030).
    • Focus on afforestation, reforestation, and ecosystem restoration.

Understanding NDC and Climate Governance

  • What are NDCs? These are voluntary climate action plans under the Paris framework, updated every 5 years with increasing ambition, reflecting national circumstances and capabilities.
  • India’s NDC evolution: Demonstrates incremental progression principle.
    • 2015: First NDC (targeting 2025)
    • 2022: Updated NDC (targets for 2030)
    • 2026: Third NDC (targets for 2035)
  • Global stocktake (GST) influence: Based on findings of the Global Stocktake (GST) (initiated 2021), it was held that the world is not on track for the 1.5°C goal.
  • India’s targets: These are shaped by equity and CBDR-RC principle (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities), developmental needs and energy security. India is on track or ahead in several parameters.

Significance of India’s Climate Strategy

  • Leadership of Global South: India positioned as a climate leader among developing countries. This signals commitment despite the historical responsibility of developed nations.
  • Balancing growth with sustainability: Focus on energy access, industrial growth, and climate mitigation, and reflecting “climate justice” approach.
  • Strategic autonomy in climate policy: NDCs are self-determined, not externally imposed, aligning with domestic priorities like energy security and affordable power.

Main Pillars of India’s Climate Strategy

  • India’s NDC is operationalized through the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) and its nine national missions, as well as the State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCC). 
  • India’s climate action is being implemented at local level through various schemes and programme such as 
    • Jal Jeevan Mission, 
    • National Mission on Sustainable Agriculture, Sustainable Habitat, 
    • MISHTI (Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats & Tangible Incomes), 
    • National Disaster Management Plan, 
    • Soil Health Card and 
    • Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY), etc.  
  • People-centric approach:
    • India’s climate efforts are centered around the principle of “Lifestyle for Environment (LiFE),” which is transforming sustainable living into a mass movement.
    • The initiatives like ‘Ek Ped Maa Ke Nam’ transformed tree plantation into a people-driven climate action.

Challenges and Concerns

  • Modest ambition: Critics argue that targets do not match India’s current progress. For example, 60% non-fossil capacity is seen as under-ambitious.
  • Gap between capacity and generation: Though 52% capacity is non-fossil, only ~25% actual generation due to intermittency of renewables.
  • Land and infrastructure constraints: Renewable expansion faces land acquisition issues, and transmission bottlenecks.
  • Forest cover limitations: Current forest and tree cover (~24.6%) is lower than the target of 33% (National Forest Policy).
  • Global inequities: Developed countries allegedly rolling back climate commitments, and imposing unilateral trade measures (e.g., carbon border taxes).

Way Forward

  • Enhancing renewable energy ecosystem: Invest in grid infrastructure, energy storage technologies, and green hydrogen.
  • Bridging capacity-generation gap: Improve efficiency and reliability of renewables. Promote hybrid systems (solar + wind + storage).
  • Strengthening carbon sink: Expand agroforestry, urban forestry, and community-led conservation.
  • Climate finance mobilisation: Push for international climate finance, technology transfer, and leverage initiatives like green bonds.
  • Policy and institutional reforms: Streamline approvals for renewable projects. Strengthen climate governance frameworks.

Conclusion

  • India’s updated 2035 NDCs reflect a measured yet pragmatic escalation in climate ambition, rooted in equity and developmental realities. 
  • While the country is on track to meet or exceed several existing targets, concerns remain about the adequacy of ambition in the face of the global climate crisis. 
  • Going forward, India’s role will be crucial in shaping a just, inclusive, and sustainable global climate order, particularly as a voice of the Global South.

Source: TH | IE

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Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)

Q1. What is the significance of India’s updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs)? +

Q2. How does the principle of CBDR-RC shape India’s climate commitments? +

Q3. Why does India face challenges in the actual clean energy transition? +

Q4. Whether India’s 2035 NDC targets are sufficiently ambitious in light of current progress? +

Q5. What is the role of carbon sinks in India’s climate strategy? +

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