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Daily-current-affairs / 06 Jul 2022

NITI Aayog’s Climate Index Status : Daily Current Affairs

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Relevance: GS-2: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation.

Key Phrases: NITI Aayog, State Energy and Climate Index, competitive Federalism, Key Performance Indicators, State’s progress in implementing clean PPA, Unexplained Arbitrariness in Weights, Sustainable National Energy Growth Trajectory.

Why in News?

  • The State Energy and Climate Index (SECI), recently launched by the NITI Aayog, aims to track and benchmark the efforts made by States and Union Territories (UTs) in the climate and energy sector, capturing dimensions such as energy access, consumption, efficiency, and environmental protection.

Key Highlights:

  • It is expected that the SECI will trigger a competitive spirit among States and UTs.
  • An exercise at the sub-national level shall contribute to helping India fulfill its commitments on climate change and clean energy transition in the global fora consistent with the spirit of cooperative federalism.
  • India’s Panchamrit elements, presented at the COP26 Conference in Glasgow aim to-
    • meet 50 percent of India’s power requirements from renewable energy sources by 2030
    • substantially reduce the carbon emissions and intensity of the economy by 2030
    • reach net-zero emissions by 2070.
  • The conceptualisation of SECI, and the commencement of benchmarking exercise through it, is a crucial step in that direction.
  • SECI measures progress on 27 Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) covering six parameters:
    • Discoms performance
    • Access
    • Affordability and reliability of energy
    • Clean energy initiatives
    • Energy efficiency
    • Environmental sustainability and new initiatives.
  • The exercise classifies States into large and small categories and the Union Territories as a separate set.

State Energy and Climate Index by NITI AYOG

  • According to the government think tank’s report, Gujarat has topped State Energy and Climate Index-Round 1 among larger states, followed by Kerala and Punjab.
  • States like Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, and Jharkhand were placed at the bottom.
  • Among the smaller states, Goa topped the Aayog’s index, followed by Tripura and Manipur.
  • Among union territories (UTs), Chandigarh topped the index, followed by Delhi and Daman & Diu/Dadra & Nagar Haveli (D&D and D&N).
  • Punjab was the best performer in discom performance parameter among larger states, while Kerala emerged as the top performer in access, affordability and reliability category among larger states.
  • Likewise, Haryana was the best performer when it comes to clean energy initiatives among larger states, while Tamil Nadu emerged as top performer in the energy efficiency category.
  • The index is based on 2019-20 data.

What are the issues with the SECI?

  • SECI suffers from certain limitations that need to be urgently addressed to make it more meaningful and consistent with its overarching objective:
  1. Conflict between Core Philosophy and Current Design:
    • There is a conflict between SECI’s current design and the core philosophy that it propounds.
    • Among the different parameters the Index considers, Discoms performance is assigned a disproportionate weight (40 per cent) compared to those that track efforts made by States and UTs in transitioning toward clean energy (15 per cent); in driving environmental sustainability (12 per cent); or in launching new initiatives (12 per cent) to lower their carbon footprint.
    • As a result of the unexplained arbitrariness in weights, Gujarat tops the overall score among large States in SECI Round I list, because of the extremely high weight assigned to the Discoms performance parameter.
    • The State is not even among the top six for four out of six parameters and has made relatively unsatisfactory efforts towards driving environmental sustainability and new initiatives, where it ranks 9th and 13th, respectively, among 20 large States.
    • If equal weight is assigned across all parameters, Gujarat’s position will come down from 1st to 5th, and Kerala, pursuing a more balanced path in climate and energy initiatives, will come out on top.
  2. Revision of weights assigned to other KPIs:
    • There is an urgent need to rethink and revise the weights assigned to other KPIs critical to reforming the current energy value chain.
    • For example, the KPIs on renewable energy penetration and utilisation of RE potential, which can play a vital role in bringing down the high input cost of electricity and emission levels, have a combined weight of only 7 per cent.
    • Similarly, a small 4 percent weight has been assigned for the proportion of consumers with smart meters.
    • The adoption of smart meters is the panacea for reducing AT&C losses and for better targeting DBT schemes for reducing deadweight losses of Discoms.
    • There is a need to revisit the design and methodology to make the Index genuinely progressive.
  3. Inertia in Transition towards Clean Power Purchase Agreements:
    • The Index appears to promote a status quo approach concerning energy management.
    • A recent McKinsey report suggests that grid emissions can be considerably reduced through Clean Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs), where sourcing power shall be through optimised renewable energy, coupled with long-duration energy storage systems.
    • Unfortunately, States have exhibited inertia in transitioning toward such futuristic clean PPAs.
    • Inclusion of indicators such as the State’s progress in implementing clean PPAs and their efforts to develop a battery ecosystem can nudge States to adopt them and help drive policy certainty in this regard.
  4. Unfair to states making real contributions:
    • SECI is not progressive and fair to States making real contributions to the net-zero emissions goal.
    • For example, the building sector, which consumes approximately 38 percent of India’s total annual primary energy demand, is critical to driving a sustainable national energy growth trajectory.
    • Towards this objective, states such as Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, which have been at the forefront of notifying and implementing the Energy Conservation and Building Code 2017, do not even figure in the top 10 of the SECI list.
  5. State's progress toward ‘Just Transition’ not considered:
    • There is no consideration in the Index for measuring the States’ progress toward ‘Just Transition’.
    • SECI rankings indicate that coal-rich States are the worst performers.
    • However, international experience suggests that implementing ‘Just Transition’ policies require long-term planning, implementation, and engagement.
    • To be fair to States fiscally dependent on revenues from non-renewable resources, SECI should ideally capture indicators of ‘Just Transition’ so that it encourages the laggard States to strive for resilient and climate-neutral economies and societies.

What is Just Transition?

  • Just Transition strategies were first forged by labor unions and environmental justice groups, rooted in low-income communities of color, who saw the need to phase out the industries that were harming workers, community health and the planet; and at the same time provide just pathways for workers to transition to other jobs.
  • It is a vision-led, unifying and place-based set of principles, processes, and practices that build economic and political power to shift from an extractive economy to a regenerative economy.
    This means approaching production and consumption cycles holistically and waste-free. The transition itself must be just and equitable; redressing past harms and creating new relationships of power for the future through reparations. If the process of transition is not just, the outcome will never be.

Conclusion:

  • SECI is a laudable and timely initiative.
  • However, it needs to include more progressive indicators, and develop more objective and fair criteria to recognise the good and innovative work done by various States.
  • It is imperative that the construction of the Index is based on an objective rationale rather than motivated by subjective and extraneous considerations.

NITI Aayog

  • The NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India) serves as the apex public policy think tank of the Government of India.
  • NITI Aayog has the twin mandate to oversee the adoption and monitoring of the SDGs in the country and promote competitive and cooperative federalism among States and UTs using a bottom-up approach.
  • The task at hand for NITI Aayog is not just to periodically collect data on SDGs but to proactively realise the goals and targets
  • Its initiatives include a "15-year road map", "7-year vision, strategy, and action plan", AMRUT, Digital India, Atal Innovation Mission, Medical Education Reform, agriculture reforms, Indices Measuring States’ Performance in Health, Education and Water Management.
  • It was established in 2015 to replace the Planning Commission which followed a top-down model.
  • The NITI Aayog council comprises all the state Chief Ministers, along with the Chief Ministers of Delhi and Puducherry, Lieutenant Governors of all UTs, and a vice-chairman nominated by the Prime Minister.
  • In addition, temporary members are selected from leading universities and research institutions.
  • These members include a chief executive officer, four ex-official members, and two part-time members.
  • Various indices launched by Niti Ayog include:
    • School Education Quality Index
    • State Health Index, Composite Water Management Index
    • Sustainable Development Goals Index
    • India Innovation Index
    • Export Competitiveness Index
    • Delta rankings for the performance of Aspirational Districts every month

Source: The Hindu BL

Mains Question:

Q. The State Energy and Climate Index of Niti Aayog suffers from various limitations that need to be urgently addressed to make it more meaningful and consistent with its overarching objective. Discuss.