India: pathways to sustaining rapid development in a new climate economy
This paper by the New Climate Economy’s India Initiative argues that India’s efforts to achieve rapid, inclusive and sustainable development have been hampered in the past by pervasive inefficiencies that arise from market, policy and institutional failures and weaknesses. Efforts to address these weaknesses in a comprehensive manner can significantly increase the pace of improvement in the well-being of the population while also better tackling environmental and climate risks. Drawing on the framework developed in the recent New Climate Economy report, Better Growth, Better Climate, focus on three critical socio-economic systems where increased efficiency, investment and innovation can yield major development and environmental benefits: energy systems, agriculture and land use, and cities.
Related Content
- Transitioning India’s road transport sector: realising climate and air quality benefits
- Reclaiming our future: a common agenda for advancing sustainable development in Asia and the Pacific
- Better cities, better growth: India’s urban opportunity
- India’s triple challenge: growth, development and climate change
- ON EARTH DAY, SCIENTISTS PUBLISH ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS FOR 2-DEGREE CELSIUS GLOBAL CLIMATE AGREEMENT