Towards a Sustainable Public-Private Partnership Model for Climate Action

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Towards a Sustainable Public-Private Partnership Model for Climate Action

2 Aug 2022

With the built urban form witnessing increasing intensity and frequency of adverse climate events, cities will have to play a central role in achieving India’s ambitious ‘Net Zero’ target by 2070. Maharashtra is implementing Climate Action Plans (CAPs) for five major cities, including Mumbai, Pune, Aurangabad, Nagpur and Nashik. It has also unveiled the ‘Net Zero Plan’ for 42 AMRUT cities. At the national level, MoHUA’s Cities Readiness Report 2021, under the ClimateSmart Cities Assessment Framework 2.0, reveals that 35 cities have initiated the development of disaster management plans. Thirty others have started work on creating vulnerability assessments and Greenhouse Gas inventories as an initial step for preparing CAPs. Across India, only nine cities have designed city-level CAPs. This is a mere drop in India’s vast urban landscape; evidently, much remains to be done for urban India to become climate-resilient.The scale of the systemic green transition demanded by climate change is so overwhelmingly extensive and urgent that it cannot be delivered without the engagement of the private sector. Increasing political will is making cities join the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) ‘Race to Zero’ global campaign; however, such policy intervention and reforms for mitigation and adaptation will not succeed without private sector participation. For example, Mumbai’s CAP target to increase the share of renewable energy in the city’s energy mix to 50 percent by 2030 and 90 percent by 2050 will need enormous private sector involvement in exploiting the city’s rooftop Solar PV potential, which can meet more than 50 percent of its peak demand.
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India