McKinsey recently released a report that presents an insight into opportunities and mechanisms to decarbonise six polluting sectors that contribute to around 70 per cent of India’s overall emissions — power, steel, transportation, cement, aviation and agriculture. The report titled, "Decarbonising India: Charting a pathway for sustainable growth", propose more than 100 decarbonisation levers across these key sectors and takes a deeper look at four cross-cutting decarbonisation opportunities: green hydrogen; carbon capture, usage, and storage (CCUS); natural climate solutions; and material circularity.
"We modeled outcomes on India’s net-zero journey along two scenarios: first, the current line-of-sight (LoS) scenario with current (and announced) policies and foreseeable technology adoption; and second, the accelerated scenario with far-reaching polices like carbon pricing and accelerated technology adoption, including technologies like CCUS. Our analysis shows that the benefits of a well-planned, orderly, accelerated transition could outweigh the downsides, given India’s growth outlook." The report said.
India announced its ambition to become a net-zero emitter by 2070 at COP26—an important milestone in the fight against climate change. The report highlights that, despite low per-capita emissions (1.8 tons CO2), India is the third-largest emitter globally, emitting a net 2.9 gigatons of carbon-dioxide equivalent (GtCO2e) every year as of 2019. The bulk of these emissions (about 70 per cent) are driven by six sectors: power, steel, automotive, aviation, cement, and agriculture.
McKinsey in its latest not only gives a detailed review for India's current situation but also lists following ten actions India may consider to accelerate its decarbonisation effort: