“If we have to reach net-zero by 2050 collectively, then India’s share in that collective goal should be a significant one,” says Nandini Das, a climate researcher based in Perth, Australia, who works for the global research group Climate Action Tracker. But she adds that in terms of finance, “India requires substantial international support.” India is the world’s third biggest carbon producer, accounting for 7.3% of global greenhouse-gas emissions in 2022. But those emissions come from 1.43 billion people, accounting for 18% of the world’s population. India’s per capita emissions last year were equivalent to 2.76 tonnes of carbon dioxide, less than one-sixth of the per capita emissions of the United States and 24 times smaller than the figure for Qatar, the world’s largest per capita emitter.
India’s average standard of living is far below those of the United States and Qatar, with 210 million people living in poverty according to United Nations metrics. India has maintained that coal — a cheap fossil fuel readily available in the country — is required to power its economic development. Coal supplied 73% of India’s electricity in 2022; and in November this year, the country announced that it would install 80 gigawatts of new coal-fired power-generation capacity by 2032. “We have to give a fair share to all developing countries in the global carbon budget,” Modi said at COP28.