IAS Gyan

Daily News Analysis

COVID-19, climate and carbon neutrality

10th November, 2020 Editorial

Context: In the post-COVID-19 world, we should make efforts to ensure that the ‘G’ in GDP is not ‘Gross’ but ‘Green’.

Introduction:

  • History is divided into two periods: Before the Common Era or BCE and Common Era or CE.
  • But given our experience this year, BCE could well stand for Before the COVID-19 Epidemic and CE for the COVID-19 Epidemic.
  • The COVID-19 crisis and its aftermath can be seen either as a longish pause on the button of economic growth or as an opportunity for reset, recalibration and rethink.

Ecological disequilibrium

  • COVID-19 is undoubtedly a public health catastrophe and certainly calls for enhanced investments in research and development that impinges directly on public health.
  • But more fundamentally, the pandemic reflects fundamental ecological disequilibrium.
  • Evidence has accumulated that loss of biodiversity and ever-increasing human incursions into the natural world have contributed heavily to the outbreak and spread of epidemic diseases.
  • Understanding the three Es — evolution, ecology and the environment — will be key to identifying potential pandemics.
  • COVID-19 also reinforces the need to pay far greater attention to the biosciences that underpin agriculture, health and the environment that are going to be profoundly impacted by the current pandemic.
  • There is also now robust scientific evidence to show, for instance, how air pollution exacerbates the impacts of COVID-19.
  • Public health science and environmental science are two sides of the same coin.
  • Our environmental problems — such as air pollution, water pollution, chemical contamination, deforestation, waste generation and accumulation, land degradation and excessive use of pesticides — all have profound public health consequences both in terms of morbidity and mortality.
  • The traditional ‘grow now, pay later’ model is not only unsustainable in the medium- to long-term but also dangerous to public health in the short term.

Climate change is a reality

  • Uncertainties in the monsoon, the frequency of extreme events, the retreat of the Himalayan glaciers and the increase in mean sea levels are real.
  • A recent report of the Ministry of Earth Sciences called ‘Assessment of climate change over the Indian region’ is an excellent and up-to-date analysis that deserves wider debate and discussion.
  • It also points to the need for making our future science and technology strategy in different areas anchored in an understanding of the impacts of climate change caused by continued emissions of greenhouse gases.
  • This scientific understanding is essential for what may be a solution at one point of time but becomes a problem at another point and may even become a threat in a different context.
  • Take the example of HFCs, or hydrofluorocarbons, that were at one time seen as the panacea to fix the depletion of the ozone layer.
  • The depletion of the ozone layer has been fixed more or less, but HFCs are a potent threat from a climate change perspective since their global warming potential is a thousand times that of carbon dioxide.

Carbon neutrality

  • In September 2018, the American State of California was the first to commit itself to carbon neutrality. The aim was to achieve this by 2045.
  • In December 2019, the European Union followed California’s example but with the year 2050 in mind.
  • In September 2020, China stunned the world by declaring its goal of carbon neutrality by 2060.
  • And just a few weeks ago, Japan and South Korea joined the club by announcing their intention to do so by 2050, like the EU.
  • India too has to begin thinking very seriously about its level of ambition in this regard, especially since this will have public health consequences as well.
  • We cannot always hide behind the fact that our per capita emissions will continue to be low — that is obvious given the continued increase in the denominator.
  • At the Paris climate change conference in 2015, India committed to having 40% of our electricity-generating capacity from non-fossil fuel sources by the year 2030.

A bolder, more worthwhile goal

  • Carbon neutrality is carbon emissions are equal to absorptions in carbon sinks, of which forests are one.
  • Both sides of the equation are important and have to be addressed simultaneously.
  • At Paris in December 2015, India made a commitment on carbon sequestration through forests.
  • Attainment of Carbon neutrality, involve massive scientific invention and technological innovation especially when it comes to removing greenhouse gases from the atmosphere.
  • Every solution being put forward these days, including nuclear energy and geo-engineering, is riddled with complications that are not easy to resolve.
  • Renewables are an integral part of the solutions we seek but they have to be seen as more than just devices: they open up avenues for re-architecturing systems as a whole.

Post-COVID-19 world

  • The post-COVID-19 world is an opportunity to switch gears and make a radical departure from the past to make economic growth ecologically sustainable.
  • Much of the infrastructure we need for the future is still to be put in place.
  • One estimate widely quoted that something like 70% of the infrastructure required in India by the year 2050 is waiting to be established.
  • GDP growth must, without doubt, revive and get back to a steady 7%-8% growth path.
  • However, in this post-COVID-19 world, we should make efforts to ensure that the ‘G’ in GDP is not ‘Gross’ but ‘Green’.
  • India can and should show to the world how the measurement of economic growth can take place while taking into account both ecological pluses and minuses.

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/covid-19-climate-and-carbon-neutrality/article33053563.ece?homepage=true