Environment: India can maintain its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the electricity sector at its 2018 level if it increases its capacity to generate clean power.
A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences from researchers at Berkeley Lab, University of California Santa Barbara, and University of California Berkeley, states that India can double its supply of electricity without an accompanying increase in GHG emissions.
“By increasing its clean power capacity from the current target of 450 gigawatts within the next decade to 600 gigawatts, the nation can hold its greenhouse gas emissions from the electricity sector at 2018 levels while nearly doubling the supply of electricity to meet economic development needs,” according to a statement released by the Berkeley Lab researchers.
India’s move away from fossil fuels will have a significant impact on global climate efforts since the country is the world’s third-largest greenhouse gas emitter, despite its per capita emissions being below the global average.
Keeping in line with its current goals, two-thirds of India’s additional renewable electricity would come from solar, and the rest from wind. However, given India’s weather and electricity demand patterns, a target that leans more heavily on wind power will lead to lower costs, according to the study.
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