India Calls For Stronger Global Climate Action
Speaking at the silver jubilee edition of the World Sustainable Development Summit (WSDS) 2026 organised by The Energy and Resources Institute (Teri), Union minister Bhupendra Yadav said countries must step up efforts to fight climate chang by expanding solar and wind power and doubling energy efficiency across industry, transport and households.
The minister said adaptation finance - money used to help countries deal with climate impacts like floods and droughts - must be scalewd up to match funds meant for reducing emissions.
He also urged reforms in multilateral development banks to unlock trillions of dollars in climate finance, stressing that ambition and finance must move together through transparent, predictable and inclusive financial systems.
Also Read | What is the true cost of ethanol blending?Yadav reiterated India's targets of achieving 500 GW of non-fossil fuel energy capacity by 2030, reducing GDP emission intensity by 45% from 2005 levels, and attaining net zero by 2070.
Warning that the world is not on track to limit warming to 1.5°C under the Paris Agreement, he said,“Emissions reduction remains insufficient, adaptation finance remains inadequate, SDG (sustainable development goals) implementation is uneven. This is not a crisis of science. It is a crisis of scale, speed and systematic alignment transformation; therefore, we must move beyond incremental policy refinement.”
He stressed that the coming decades must focus on delivery.“We must move from pledges to performance. From targets to trajectories. From ambition to accountability.”
Also Read | Stricter emission rules may be delayed for 25–75 hp tractors after industry pushExperts stressed that climate change should not remain limited to conferences or elite discussions.
“This is a time for action, it's important that we democratize the language of climate change, it is not something which has to be restricted to conferences, to drawing room discussions, to boardrooms, it has to go to the masses, they have to understand how it impacts them and then we have to work on solutions which are rooted in the local context with equal emphasis given to adaptation as we give to mitigation," said Siddharth Sharma, CEO, Tata Trusts.
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