Mumbai Is The First South Asian City To Detail Net-Zero Roadmap
MUMBAI (BLOOMBERG) – Mumbai announced detailed plans to zero out carbon emissions by 2050, a target that puts it two decades ahead of India’s national goal and makes it the first city in South Asia to set such a timeline.
In the plan announced on Sunday (March 13), India’s financial centre, home to south Asia’s biggest corporations, stock bourses and the central bank, has proposed exhaustive changes to the way it manages energy, water, air, waste, green spaces and transport for its 19 million residents.
“We don’t have the luxury of time,” said Mr Aaditya Thackeray, the Environment Minister of the state of Maharashtra, of which Mumbai is the capital. Without intervention, the effects of climate change could cost India US$35 trillion (S$47.15 trillion) over the next 50 years. India’s richest city, Mumbai is also home to tremendous poverty, with slums and fishing villages along the southern coast that date to British rule.
By 2050, rising sea levels are expected to flood those parts of the city. In total, unabated climate change could cost the city US$920 million. Drawing on inputs from officials, citizens, researchers and companies, Mumbai’s plan lists changes across six domains. This includes investments in housing, electrifying public transport and more walkable roads; flood-resistant drainage; and water conservation, apart from adding open spaces, investing in clean water and sanitation, and rooftop solar capacities.
[activecampaign form=9 css=1]Mumbai may consider raising funds through green bonds announced by the federal government, according to Mr Saurabh Punamiya, government adviser. It will receive funding from Maharashtra, which also plans to raise funds for climate mitigation projects through the federal government and global lenders, said Mr Tanmay Takle, policy adviser to the state government.
This access to investments, along with a US$6 billion annual budget, give the city an advantage over peers to implement climate targets. “The policies are actually opening the doors for such investments to come in,” Mr Thackeray said. Mumbai’s plan could help India rethink current models of development that put economic growth ahead of environmental stewardship, said Associate Professor Nikhil Anand, who teaches anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania.
If Mumbai is successful, it could turn India’s focus to other pressing issues, including access to clean water and services for the city’s significant homeless population.
“To pursue development that secures climate justice in the near future is a non-negotiable,” said Associate Professor Anand. “The Climate Action Plan needs to take care of stabilising those systems, if it wants to make a meaningful difference in the life of its citizens.” In the coming three decades, the city aims to cut to zero its total greenhouse emission, which in 2019 stood at 23.42 million tonnes or 1.8 tonnes per capita.
The largest investments will have to come into energy, which accounts for 72 per cent of total emissions, according to the plan documents.
Vehicle emissions and waste comprise the rest.
Mumbai’s short-term priorities include the purchase of 2,100 electric buses by 2023 at a cost of 130 billion rupees (S$2.28 billion). The city will also spend on projects like retrofitting low-income homes with electricity-efficient equipment. Plans for some crucial aspects of Mumbai’s transition – switching its peak 3,400MW electricity consumption to renewable power sources for instance – remain unclear.
Private conglomerates including the Tata Group and billionaire Gautam Adani’s companies, which supply power to the city mostly from coal plants, have said they will make investments in order to meet their own net-zero transition goals. South Asia’s other megapolises including New Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Kolkata, Dhaka and Karachi are also preparing climate action plans. “There are policy changes today which will move forward with every government,” Mr Thackeray said.
“Across India, there is a certain sense of urgency everyone feels.”
Internet of Medical Things(IoMT), Disrupting and Democratising Healthcare Sector
How Does Chery’s N95-class Air-conditioning Filter Provide Protection in Vietnam?
Ukraine Crisis Clouds Asian’s Market Outlook
Tesla’s Unbelievable Factory Efficiency
A New Rise In India’s Health-Tech Sector 2022
Collins Aerospace Expands MRO Capacity In China And Malaysia
Factbox: How Companies Are Rebuffing Russia
WANT MORE INSIDER NEWS? SUBSCRIBE TO OUR DIGITAL MAGAZINE NOW!
Do you have an opinion about this story? Do you have some thoughts you’d like to share with our readers? APMEN News would love to hear from you!
Email your letter to the Editorial Team at [email protected]