City
Epaper

Indian private sector to drive carbon transition: Moody's

By IANS | Updated: April 19, 2022 11:20 IST

Chennai, April 19 Indian private sector has to drive the carbon transition efforts as the country's significant economic ...

Open in App

Chennai, April 19 Indian private sector has to drive the carbon transition efforts as the country's significant economic development needs will constrain the government's ability to extend sufficient financial support, said Moody's Investors Service.

According to Moody's, many large corporations have launched a wide range of emission targets through 2050.

"India's (Baa3 stable) 2070 net-zero target and intermediate goals through 2030 present significant policy implementation challenges for the government, carving a more central role for private companies and investors to drive the transition, according to a new report by Moody's.

"The country's high growth potential, significant economic development needs and large agricultural sector will likely weaken the government's policy resolve and financial capacity to drive the economy's carbon transition. As such, India's planned emissions reductions will be conditioned upon low-cost, long-term private capital," Nishad Majmudar, Assistant Vice President and Analyst said.

Many of the country's large private companies have announced net-zero targets that are well ahead of Indian authorities' goals, while the government-linked companies are comparatively behind. Additional policy signals to encourage transition would drive higher private investment.

"The pace of India's carbon transition will depend on the extent to which the government can balance energy affordability and reliability needs against its emissions reduction commitments," said Abhishek Tyagi, Vice President and Senior Credit Officer.

"Reduced storage costs and the scalability of renewable projects with storage would support a faster transition," added Tyagi.

Indian banks' significant loans to carbon-intensive sectors expose them to transition risks, and they will face pressure to decarbonise their loan books. At the same time, green financing presents a significant lending opportunity, given banks' dominant role in credit intermediation in the country, Moody's said.

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

Tags: Abhishek tyagiindiachennaiMoodyMoody's investors serviceMoody's investor serviceIndiUk-indiaRepublic of indiaIndia indiaGia india
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalChennai-Bangalore Highway Traffic Update: 4-Km Jam in Ranipet Due to Incomplete Arcot Flyover (Watch Video)

CricketIndia vs South Africa 2025 Schedule: Full List of Matches, Dates, Venues and Fixtures

TechnologyOpenAI Offers ChatGPT Go Free for a Year in India; Check All the Features Users Can Now Access

NationalChennai ED Office Receives Bomb Threat, Sniffer Dog, BDDS Team Conduct Searches

NationalSchool Holiday in Tamil Nadu on October 27? Chennai and Other Districts Brace for Heavy Rainfall Amid Cyclone Montha

International Realted Stories

InternationalUAE: IAF contingent comprising Suryakiran Aerobatic Team, Tejas fighters arrives for Dubai Air Show

InternationalG20 Summit to proceed despite US absence, says South African President

InternationalIDF shows proof Hezbollah killed Christian politician in Lebanon

InternationalPakistan: 25 million children out of school, number rising every year

InternationalEAD launches AI-powered portal to enhance environmental monitoring, reporting