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.
Last updated on March, 2026
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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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