Try GOLD - Free
Enact a unified framework of law for climate action
Mint Ahmedabad
|October 15, 2025
India has set ambitious climate goals, but lacks a critical piece: the institutional and financial architecture to achieve them.
Estimates suggest India needs over $ 1.5 trillion by 2030 to meet its climate and net-zero pledges. Attracting finance is a challenge, but the deeper issue lies in how these funds are managed. Fragmented responsibilities, ‘opaque spending and weak accountability risk keeping ambitious pledges from becoming bankable projects.
Fiscal credibility and climate ambition are two sides of the same coin. Mobilizing capital at scale requires a public financial management (PFM) system that covers budgeting, reporting and auditing, and functions with clarity and predictability. In other words, India needs a unified institutional framework to unlock its green transition.
Institutional chasm:
Currently, climate governance is scattered under the ministry of environment, forests and climate change (MoEFCC), ministry of finance, Niti Aayog and the ministry of new and renewable energy (MNRE), while states handle most of the policy implementation. The MNRE, for example, drives solar and green hydrogen initiatives, but its efforts remain in a silo apart from India’s broader climate agenda.
Bodies like the Prime Minister's Council on Climate Change (PMCCC) have attained limited traction and we have no statutorily-backed intergovernmental council to address cross-state challenges. Expectations that successive Finance Commissions would introduce climate-linked grants have not materialized, largely because of an absence of statutory backing and uniform metrics.
This story is from the October 15, 2025 edition of Mint Ahmedabad.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint Ahmedabad
Mint Ahmedabad
Govt plans to nudge auto industry to invest in a rare-earth-free future
The government plans to nudge the automobile industry to invest in research and development (R&D) of rare-earth-magnetfree technology, according to two officials aware of the plan, as the country seeks to break free from China's stranglehold and adopt cleaner solutions.
2 mins
November 04, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Nukes: We should push for a no-first-use treaty
As nuclear weapons threaten to escape restraints, India must champion its own doctrine as a pledge for countries with such arsenals to adopt. The safety of the world demands no less
2 mins
November 04, 2025
 Mint Ahmedabad
China's AI push: Can popular adoption boost its economy?
Mass usage of AI sounds promising but it needs to prove useful
3 mins
November 04, 2025
 Mint Ahmedabad
Double relief for Vi on AGR dues, legacy income tax case
Back-to-back reliefs lift Vodafone Idea's stock nearly 10% amid hopes of regulatory reprieve
3 mins
November 04, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Gold import rules under UAE pact tightened
The directorate general of foreign trade (DGFT) has revised procedures for allocating tariff rate quotas for gold imports under the IndiaUAE comprehensive economic partnership agreement (Cepa), introducing new eligibility criteria and shifting to a competitive online bidding system.
1 min
November 04, 2025
 Mint Ahmedabad
Trump says Xi Jinping will help fight fentanyl. Will China follow through?
For years, the U.S. and China have been locked in a pattern on the deadly issue of fentanyl. The White House pressures Beijing to stop Chinese companies from exporting chemicals used to make the drug to Mexico. Beijing takes incremental steps in exchange for Washington dialing down economic pressure-only for China to drag its feet when relations deteriorate.
3 mins
November 04, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Banks trim gilts to power loan book as deposits lag
Banks have been liquidating their holdings in government securities in order to finance credit growth at a time deposits remain hard to come by, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data showed.
1 min
November 04, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Fountain pens are more popular than ever—and purists are fuming
Paul Homchick bought his first fountain pen three decades ago. He was working as an engineering consultant and wanted to seem trustworthy as he took notes.
3 mins
November 04, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Should India’s inflation tracker account for free food handouts?
The government's foodgrain provisions reduce the cost of living but every statistical measure must retain conceptual clarity
4 mins
November 04, 2025
 Mint Ahmedabad
India one of the most active mkts in Asia for KKR: Co-CEO
According to Nuttall, the exact trajectory will depend on the opportunity set on the ground
3 mins
November 04, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
