India's delayed but significant update to its climate commitments under the Paris Agreement has finally arrived. A section of the agreement, which requires all countries except the United States to revise their targets every five years since 2020, saw India and Argentina as the only G-20 nations without updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) for 2035 until recently. India’s Environment Minister had pledged at COP30 in November 2025 to finalize the update by year-end, which was achieved before the end of Financial Year 2025-26. The latest NDCs commit India to achieving 60% non-fossil energy capacity by 2035, reducing emissions intensity by 47% compared to GDP, and establishing a carbon sink between 3.5 and 4 billion tonnes of CO2. This surpasses India’s 2020 targets of 50% non-fossil capacity, 45% emissions intensity reduction, and a carbon sink of 2.5 to 3 billion tonnes. The European Union has set a 40%-49% emissions reduction target below 2005 levels, while India, as a developing nation, avoids annual emissions cuts. Instead, it focuses on lowering carbon intensity per unit of energy and increasing non-fossil power generation. India also pledged net-zero by 2070 through expanding forest cover and adopting technologies like carbon capture, utilization, and storage. Officials assert that India’s 2035 goals are achievable, noting that the country already met its 2030 non-fossil target with 52% installed capacity. However, challenges persist. Only 25% of generated power is non-fossil due to inadequate battery storage, which limits the ability to harness solar and wind energy fully. The Power Ministry’s National Generation Adequacy Plan projects 70% of India’s 1,121 GW installed capacity by 2035-36 to come from non-fossil sources.#india #eu #environment_minister #cop30 #paris_agreement
