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India Needs to Grow, Says PM

Modi, Outlines Plan on Emission


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All India | Edited by Anindita Sanyal | Updated: December 01, 2015 01:58 IST
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Advanced countries should also take the lead as they have "most room for impact", Prime Minister
Narendra Modi said. (AFP photo)

PARIS: Prime Minister Narendra Modi today told the global climate summit in Paris
that while India has set advanced targets to cut carbon emissions and switch to
clean energy, it is the developed countries that should take the lead in countering
climate change.
Addressed the 21st session of the Conference of Parties or COP21 in Paris, PM
Modi said, "We hope advanced nations will assume ambitious targets and pursue
them... We look to the developed countries to mobilise $100 billion annually by 2020
for mitigation and adaptation."

The Paris summit aims to forge an elusive agreement to curb global warming by
limiting the emission of greenhouse gases and the US has contended that India
should make firm commitments in this regard.
Today, PM Modi said India is a developing country "that needs to grow rapidly to
meet the aspirations of 1.25 billion people -- 300 million of whom are without access
to energy".

"Climate justice means developing countries should have enough room to grow," the
Prime Minister said. "This means mitigating actions, removing conditions, revisiting
targets... The principles of equity and common but differentiated responsibilities must
remain the bedrock of our collective enterprise."
India has contended that the developed countries have a historical responsibility,
since the burden of pollution over 200 years have come from there. Today, the Prime
Minister said it was not just a "historical responsibility", advanced countries should
also take the lead as they have "most room for impact."
Still, India, he said, will take significant steps to reduce emissions by 35% of 2005
levels by 2030 and only 40% of our installed capacity will be fossil fuels. India will
expand renewable energy, enlarge forest cover, reduce dependence on fossil fuels
and transform public transportation in cities.

The question of having a consensus on a single policy to counter global warming has
been fraught with bickering over two decades.
In 1997, Kyoto Protocol -- a resolution formed after a climate conference in Japan -set binding targets for carbon emission. But the US never accepted the Kyoto
protocol. Several other countries who signed the agreement also pulled out. Since
then, developed nations have taken few steps to significantly cut carbon emissions.
In 2009, the COP15 in Copenhagen decided that up to $100 billion will have to be
given in aid to help developing countries to reach their emissions goals by 2020.

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