What Happened
- The Union Cabinet approved India's enhanced Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) for the period 2031–2035, to be submitted to the UNFCCC under the Paris Agreement.
- The new NDC sets a target of reducing the emissions intensity of GDP by 47% by 2035 from 2005 levels (up from the 2030 target of 45%).
- India also targets achieving 60% of cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil fuel-based energy resources by 2035.
- India has already exceeded its earlier 2030 NDC goals ahead of schedule: 52.57% non-fossil capacity was achieved by February 2026, five years ahead of the 2030 deadline.
- The new plan also raises the carbon sink ambition to 3.5–4.0 billion tonnes of CO₂ equivalent through forest and tree cover by 2035.
Static Topic Bridges
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) Under the Paris Agreement
The Paris Agreement (adopted in December 2015, entered into force November 2016) established a bottom-up architecture where each signatory country submits its own climate action plan, called a Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC). Unlike the Kyoto Protocol's top-down binding targets for developed nations, the Paris Agreement's NDC mechanism applies universally but allows each country to set its own ambition, which must progressively increase — this is known as the "ratchet mechanism."
- NDCs must be submitted every five years, with each successive NDC required to represent a progression beyond the previous one
- India's original 2015 NDC committed to: 33–35% reduction in emissions intensity by 2030 (from 2005), 40% non-fossil installed capacity by 2030, and a 2.5–3 billion tonne carbon sink
- Updated NDC (2022): enhanced targets to 45% intensity reduction and 50% non-fossil capacity by 2030
- The new 2035 NDC (47% intensity, 60% non-fossil) represents India's third NDC submission
Connection to this news: India's new NDC elevates both quantitative targets while introducing a longer-term 2070 net-zero commitment, positioning India as a major actor in global climate diplomacy.
Emissions Intensity vs. Absolute Emissions: India's Approach
India uses "emissions intensity of GDP" as its primary climate metric rather than absolute emission reduction targets. Emissions intensity measures the amount of greenhouse gas emitted per unit of economic output (CO₂ per unit of GDP). This approach allows India's economy to grow while decoupling that growth from emissions growth — the economy can expand faster than emissions, achieving a relative rather than absolute reduction.
- India argues this approach is equitable: it respects India's right to development while committing to clean growth
- Emission intensity targets do not cap absolute emissions — India's total emissions may still rise as the economy grows, but at a slower rate relative to GDP
- Critics argue intensity targets are insufficient for meeting global 1.5°C/2°C goals, as absolute emissions still rise
- India's emission intensity fell by 33% between 2005 and 2019 — on track before the new 2035 target was set
Connection to this news: The 47% intensity cut by 2035 is India's most ambitious intensity target to date. Its credibility is reinforced by India having already exceeded prior targets ahead of schedule.
India's Renewable Energy Transition: Non-Fossil Capacity Targets
India's electricity system is shifting rapidly from coal-dominated to diversified low-carbon sources. Non-fossil capacity includes solar, wind, hydropower, nuclear, and other renewables. India's installed non-fossil capacity crossed 52.57% of total installed capacity by early 2026, surpassing the 2030 NDC target of 50% five years early. The new 60% target by 2035 continues this trajectory.
- India targets 500 GW of non-fossil capacity by 2030 under the National Electricity Plan
- Solar and wind lead the expansion: India has the fourth-largest installed renewable energy capacity globally
- The National Solar Mission (part of NAPCC) has been a key driver of solar expansion
- Nuclear power, though a small share, counts as non-fossil capacity and India is expanding its fleet
Connection to this news: Achieving 60% non-fossil capacity by 2035 will require sustained policy support, grid integration investment, and green hydrogen/storage solutions to manage intermittency.
Carbon Sinks: Forests and Land Use in Climate Commitments
A carbon sink is any natural or artificial reservoir that absorbs more carbon than it releases. India's NDC includes a specific carbon sink target through afforestation and reforestation. Forests, grasslands, and wetlands serve as sinks by sequestering atmospheric CO₂ through photosynthesis and biomass accumulation.
- India's 2035 NDC target: create a carbon sink of 3.5–4.0 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent through additional forest and tree cover
- India's Forest Policy 1988 and subsequent schemes (Green India Mission under NAPCC) support afforestation
- The Indian Forest Survey (FSI) reports that India's forest and tree cover is approximately 24.62% of total geographic area
- Carbon sinks are officially tracked through National Inventories submitted to the UNFCCC
Connection to this news: The enhanced carbon sink target (3.5–4.0 GtCO₂e by 2035, up from 2.5–3 GtCO₂e by 2030) signals that India intends to supplement its energy transition with nature-based solutions.
Key Facts & Data
- India's 2035 NDC: 47% reduction in emissions intensity of GDP from 2005 levels
- 60% cumulative electric power installed capacity from non-fossil sources by 2035
- Carbon sink target: 3.5–4.0 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent by 2035
- India achieved 52.57% non-fossil capacity as of February 2026 — five years ahead of the 2030 deadline
- India's long-term net-zero goal: 2070
- Prior 2030 NDC: 45% emission intensity reduction, 50% non-fossil capacity
- India's emission intensity fell 33% between 2005 and 2019, on track for the 2022 updated targets