City
Epaper

Indian development trajectory emission matters globally: WB official Martin Raiser

By ANI | Updated: February 7, 2024 13:05 IST

New Delhi (India), February 7 : Martin Raiser, a senior World Bank official, on Wednesday lauded India for its ...

Open in App

New Delhi (India), February 7 : Martin Raiser, a senior World Bank official, on Wednesday lauded India for its high economic growth and modest emission, saying India's development trajectory matters globally and its track record puts it on a much lower carbon emissions path than other major economies.

Speaking at an event here, Martin Raiser, Vice President for the South Asia Region at the World Bank, emphasized the need for climate resilience as India is among the top 10 Most climate-vulnerable.

He also stressed the importance of more private investment along with public funding to address the climate issue

Raiser was speaking at the World Sustainable Development Summit Day 1 organized by The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI).

Emphasizing that India today emits only 2.8 tons of CO2 per year, a quarter of China's and less than half of the global average, Raiser believes the country would continue on this high growth, modest emissions path. He cited two arguments to support his argument.

"First, because it's the remains of the economy driven by low emission services, even if demand for industrial goods is likely to increase as India organizes and builds more infrastructure to serve this fast-growing economy. Second, technological progress will allow India to increasingly comfortable energy supply from carbon emissions and has already made significant inroads in the power sector" he said.

Raiser also pointed out that India is the world's fourth largest renewables market and owns 3 per cent of the global manufacturing capabilities.

"India's development trajectory matters globally. Its track record today puts it on a much lower carbon emissions path than other major economies in the form of its climate vulnerability, deep domestic capital markets and domestic innovation capacity, which may also position it as a leader in developing and funding climate smart climate," he said.

Raiser is of the view that India's industrial sector is more challenging to decarbonize while mentioning that it is projected that industry alone will account for 50 per cent of India's carbon emissions by 2050.

"India is among the top 10 climate-vulnerable countries globally. Planning for climate resilience is therefore essential," he mentioned.

"It is international partners, including the multilateral development bank's have the responsibility to support these efforts," he added.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

MaharashtraCorruption in Beed Water Supply Dept: Executive Engineer, Caught Taking ₹80,000 Bribe

NationalBengaluru Tragedy: 20-Year-Old Woman Dies After Falling from 13th Floor While Filming Social Media Reel

NationalAnbumani Ramadoss slams DMK over 'unfulfilled' promises on ration shop reforms

NationalChhattisgarh: PMAY-G fulfilling dreams of poor in Kawardha, bringing shelter and dignity

BusinessIndian companies debt growth slowed in last 5 yrs as companies using internal accruals for growth: BoB Report

Business Realted Stories

BusinessKelachandra Coffee to Showcase India's Specialty Coffee Excellence at World of Coffee 2025 Geneva

BusinessCentre takes stock of mega infra projects coming up in Jharkhand, northeast states

BusinessIndian PSUs turn wealth creators, add Rs 57 lakh crore in market cap in just 5 years

BusinessSachin Parikh: From Stage Lights to Spotlight

BusinessOla Electric sales crash 65 pc YoY in June, slips to 3rd spot in market share