Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Passez à l'illimité avec Magzter GOLD

Obtenez un accès illimité à plus de 9 000 magazines, journaux et articles Premium pour seulement

$149.99
 
$74.99/Année

Essayer OR - Gratuit

The entropy trap: Climate plans may be adding to global fragility

Mint New Delhi

|

November 20, 2025

The mitigation-first model exposes developing countries to the risk of complexity outpacing the buffers needed to manage it

- V. ANANTHA NAGESWARAN

The entropy trap: Climate plans may be adding to global fragility

As leaders gather for CoP-30 in Belém, Brazil, the world risks reenacting a familiar ritual: ambitious declarations, accelerated timelines and renewed pressure on developing countries to decarbonize faster. But beneath the rhetoric lies an uncomfortable truth.

The global climate strategy, as currently designed and sequenced, is generating the very disorder, fragility and instability it seeks to avert. It is pushing societies into what can be called ‘the entropy trap’: a condition in which well-intentioned transitions increase systemic complexity faster than they increase the capacity to manage it.

This is not an ideological argument. It is structural and, at its foundation, thermodynamic: Modern economies are vast systems of continuous energy transformation. Every transaction—running a factory, streaming a video or irrigating a field—is a thermodynamic process. And thermodynamics has an unforgiving constant: energy transformations tend to increase entropy, or disorder, unless supported by sufficient buffers, redundancies and stabilizing structures.

For two centuries, advanced economies kept entropy in check by relying on dense, stable and dispatchable energy sources: coal, oil and gas. These fuels powered predictable grids, scalable industrial systems and steady growth that built state capacity and social resilience.

The global climate agenda now seeks to replace these dense energy sources with diffuse, intermittent and geographically dispersed ones—solar and wind. This shift is essential in the long run. But the way it is being pursued—rapidly, uniformly and often prematurely—adds complexity before countries have built the institutions, grids and financial systems needed to absorb it. When complexity outruns capacity, entropy rises.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

E-gold firms seek regulatory cover

Digital gold companies may ask the union government to approve their plans for self-regulation if the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) refuses to regulate the instrument, said a top executive at the India Bullion and Jewellery Association (IBJA), the apex body for all bullion and jewellery associations in India.

time to read

3 mins

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

Red Fort blast: Can tech bolster India's security?

The 10 November suicide bombing in the heart of Delhi has raised concerns about public safety in crowded hubs across India. While agencies pursue the perpetrators, police are sharpening their ability to detect security gaps, and fortify defences. Mint looks at the measures.

time to read

2 mins

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

How high credit card utilization affects your score: a quick guide

I had a ₹1 lakh credit card bill but repaid ₹40,000; ₹60.000 is due. Will it hurt my credit score? Can I take a personal loan to clear it? Will it affect my score and future loan applications? - Name withheld on request

time to read

1 mins

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Incentives drive each and every participant in all capital markets

Investors must note that everyone is motivated by self-interest whether we know the specifics or not

time to read

4 mins

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

India's financial boom: Let's keep progress real

Record funds raised for shareholder exits rather than fresh investment go against the spirit of IPOs. The bigger issue is that the financial world must stay in sync with the real economy

time to read

2 mins

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

India Inc's rural engine sputters in Sep quarter

Tepid farm income, sluggish credit growth and an uneven consumption recovery weighed on the momentum of companies linked to rural India in the September quarter, pulling back their pace of growth, even as they stayed ahead of the non-rural pack on some key parameters, a Mint analysis showed.

time to read

3 mins

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Meta's big court win

Social media major Meta has won big relief as a US judge ruled in its favour in an antitrust case filed by the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) that could have forced it to spin off Instagram and WhatsApp.

time to read

1 min

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

xAI in talks to raise $15 billion in fresh equity

Elon Musk's artificial-intelligence startup xAI is in advanced talks to raise $15 billion in fresh equity at a valuation of $230 billion, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

time to read

1 min

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Mint New Delhi

AYURVEDIC HOSPITAL CARE: WHY INSURERS PUSH BACK—AND HOW TO WIN CLAIMS

Over the past few years, a friend has undergone Ayurvedic treatment for fluctuating blood pressure at a Kerala hospital. The insurer had routinely covered a week of hospitalization, but this time rejected the claim, arguing the annual treatment appeared more like rest than medical necessity. Ayurvedic claims are becoming harder to get approved.

time to read

3 mins

November 20, 2025

Mint New Delhi

Fabindia-Biome row now in arbitration

The founders of personal care company Biome Life Sciences India Pvt. Ltd on Wednesday told the Delhi high court that they were withdrawing their petition against parent Fabindia Ltd over share valuations.

time to read

2 mins

November 20, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size