By IANS,
London : Indian plans to set numerical targets for curbing greenhouse gas emissions were described Friday as a “breakthrough” that challenges the US and other rich nations over climate change action.
Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh told The Times of London legislation was being drafted to limit India’s carbon footprint ahead of a UN climate change summit in Copenhagen December.
The paper said the announcement marks a breakthrough in climate change talks that are stalled over inaction by rich nations led by the US.
Ramesh said India will legislate to set its own targets for mitigating carbon emissions through various domestic initiatives, such as a massive plan to promote solar energy.
The new targets will be consistent with an annual growth rate of 8 to 9 per cent for India’s GDP, Ramesh said.
He said that in Copenhagen India will stick to its long-standing commitment to keep per capita greenhouse gas emissions below those of developed nations – and would not agree to any internationally binding cuts.
“This notion that India is intransigent on mitigation is crap. We are mitigating and mitigating considerably to save our forests and our rivers. But for an international agreement, the developed world has to demonstrate its seriousness much more credibly than it has done so far,” Ramesh told the paper.