Posts

What if energy poverty was eradicated by 2030? [38]

Summary of the Article: Eradicating energy poverty by 2030—i.e., achieving universal access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for households and productive uses—would yield outsized gains in health, education, gender equity, and economic productivity. Today, ~685 million people lack electricity (2022) and ~2.1 billion lack clean cooking ; progress has slowed post‑pandemic, with a first‑time reversal in global electrification in 2022. Achieving universal access by 2030 would require (i) accelerated grid and decentralized renewables scale‑up, (ii) affordability instruments (lifeline tariffs, targeted subsidies), and (iii) massive last‑mile financing, particularly in Sub‑Saharan Africa and parts of Asia. [worldbank.org] [iea.org] , [trackingsd....esmap.org] India’s near‑universal electrification and rapid smart‑metering rollout provide a replicable playbook for reliability and cost recovery, while clean cooking requires sustained support (LPG affordability, last‑...

What if global emission trading became mandatory? [36]

Summary of the Article: Mandating a global emissions trading system (ETS) would synchronize carbon prices, accelerate least‑cost abatement, and unlock capital flows from high‑emitting to low‑cost mitigation regions. Yet success would hinge on credible caps, robust MRV (monitoring, reporting, verification), market integrity , and equity mechanisms for developing economies. Existing blueprints— EU ETS , China’s expanding ETS , Article 6 under the Paris Agreement, and sectoral mechanisms like CORSIA —show feasibility and pitfalls. For India, compulsion would intersect with the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) and EU CBAM exposure , demanding rapid alignment of baselines, registry, and verification, plus targeted industrial decarbonization (steel, aluminum, cement). Immediate priorities: harden data and governance, ring‑fence revenues for transition, and negotiate Article 6 rules that recognize domestic intensity‑based pathways . [climate.ec.europa.eu] , [icapcarbonaction.com] , [u...

Major Annual Awards conducted in India

list of major annual awards in India across power, energy, renewable energy, sustainability, climate change, green innovation, and related domains , based entirely on verified sources. 🔥 1. IPPAI Power Awards Recognizes excellence across the power generation, transmission, distribution, regulatory, renewable, and innovation segments . Includes awards for thermal, hydro, solar, wind, DISCOM performance, SLDC, SERC reforms, green hydrogen, battery storage, smart grids, EV promotion, and more. [rpr.ippai.org] ☀️ 2. Mercom India Renewable Energy Awards Part of the Mercom India Renewables Summit; honors top contributors in solar, wind, floating solar, hybrid, energy storage, rooftop solar, engineered solutions, and financial/strategic deals . Categories include Best Large-Scale Solar Project , Best C&I Project , Best Wind Project , Best Floating Solar Project , Best Innovation – Product , and more. [mercomindia.com] , [businessne...isweek.com] 🌱 3. Renewable Energy India (REI) Award...

What if energy was declared a basic human right? [34]

Summary of the Article: Recognising energy as a basic human right would reframe access to reliable, affordable, clean energy as an enforceable entitlement rather than a policy aspiration. It would: (1) hard‑wire a minimum service guarantee (lifeline electricity and clean cooking) into law; (2) compel non‑discriminatory, quality supply with redress; (3) mobilise public finance and blended capital at scale; and (4) anchor transition policies (rooftop, storage, EV charging, green hydrogen) in equity and just‑transition principles. The move would build on the UN’s SDG 7 (energy for all) and the UN General Assembly’s 2022 recognition of the right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment —creating a powerful rights‑based pathway from “access” to “adequate, clean and reliable” energy. [sdgs.un.org] , [news.un.org] 1) Why a rights framing changes the game From target to entitlement. SDG 7 already commits nations to “affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all” ...