Confusion surrounds India's carbon credit plan in Budget 2026

India's Union Budget 2026 includes a ₹20,000 crore outlay for a carbon credit programme, leading to debate over its focus on heavy industries or farmers. Official documents link it to Carbon Capture, Utilisation, and Storage (CCUS) for hard-to-abate sectors, while some narratives highlight potential income for farmers through sustainable practices.

India's Union Budget 2026 announced a ₹20,000 crore outlay for a carbon credit programme, sparking confusion over its purpose. An op-ed in The Hindu notes that it anchors on the Department of Science and Technology (DST)'s 'R&D Roadmap for CCUS' released in December 2025. The roadmap targets 'hard-to-abate' industries like power, steel, cement, refineries, and chemicals, where process emissions are concentrated and challenging to eliminate via renewables alone. Agriculture is explicitly excluded from CCUS sectors, as its emissions—mainly methane and nitrous oxide—are diffuse and biologically mediated, unsuitable for point-source capture. The document distinguishes CCUS (preventing industrial emissions) from Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR), where agriculture contributes through soil sequestration, biochar, and agroforestry. Despite this, media reports and social media portray it as enabling farmers to earn credits via regenerative practices, conflating it with voluntary carbon markets. The op-ed attributes confusion to the Budget's broad 'carbon credit programme' phrasing amid discussions on agricultural credits. Analyst Arkalgud N. Ganeshamurthy, a Fellow of the National Academy of Agricultural Sciences, urges the government to separate smokestack industries from soil-based efforts. The CCUS initiative is vital for decarbonising industry, responsible for a quarter of India's emissions, while agriculture offers parallel sequestration potential needing distinct policy.

相关文章

Illustration of Germany's minimal 2025 CO2 emissions decline, Minister Schneider presenting data amid opposition protests warning of EU fines.
AI 生成的图像

Germany's 2025 climate balance shows stagnant emissions decline

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

Germany's greenhouse gas emissions fell by just 0.1 percent in 2025 to 649 million tons of CO₂ equivalents, marking the smallest decline in four years. Opposition parties Greens and Left criticize the federal government for shortcomings and warn of EU fines in billions. Environment Minister Carsten Schneider highlights progress but calls for a push.

South Africa’s carbon tax has remained intact in the 2026 budget, despite proposals from Energy Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa to suspend it amid pressure from fossil fuel lobbies. The tax increased from R236 to R308 per tonne of carbon dioxide equivalent as of 1 January 2026, continuing its role in climate mitigation efforts. Debates persist on its economic impacts and alignment with job creation needs.

由 AI 报道

The government has approved the Urban Challenge Fund (UCF) to boost urban development, providing Rs 1 lakh crore in central assistance from FY 2025-26 to FY 2030-31. The fund is expected to catalyse nearly Rs 4 lakh crore in total investment, emphasizing market-linked financing. Experts see it as a significant shift toward productive, sustainable, and inclusive urbanisation.

中国科学院上海先进研究院开发的ScienceOne-Yuheng碳核算大模型,将中国2022年温室气体排放量比联合国模型低17.7%,同时将美国的排放总量上调15.2%。该模型考虑生产和消费两方面,减轻了包括中国在内的出口国的责任。

由 AI 报道

The agribusiness caucus in Congress wants to use at least R$ 30 billion from the pre-salt social fund to ease sector debts. The proposal was discussed at a Senate meeting on Wednesday (8), called by President Davi Alcolumbre at the request of Senator Tereza Cristina (PP-MS). Finance Minister Dario Durigan signaled support for an emergency credit line.

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝