Public engagement
Opinions
Bidding Goodbye to COP33: Has India Missed a Trick?
Aman Srivastava
The Quint | 16 April 2026
While the withdrawal was quiet, the decision itself speaks volumes about India’s shifting climate priorities.
India’s AI Push Is Quietly Draining Its Energy, Resources, and Space
Escandita Tewari
The Quint | 26 December 2025
India is rapidly expanding its artificial intelligence infrastructure, from semiconductor manufacturing partnerships like the Tata PSMC project to a projected 9GW data centre capacity by 2030. This AI-led growth brings significant environmental challenges, including high water and energy use, increased e-waste, and weak regulatory oversight. Can India achieve digital leadership without worsening environmental vulnerabilities?
Forest finance and the challenges money cannot fix
Ishan Kukreti
Mongabay India | 24 December 2025
Forest finance remains low, largely dependent on public funds, and flowing mainly to richer countries, even as deforestation pressures are highest in tropical regions. Brazil has proposed a new forest financing mechanism, the Tropical Forest Forever Facility, which aims to support standing natural forests for climate mitigation, an approach different from existing mechanisms. However, without addressing equity, weak monitoring systems, and outdated forest definitions, the initiative may fall short of delivering meaningful change.
In the news
As Indian Cities Struggle to Plan for Heat, the Most Vulnerable Suffer
Dialogue Earth | 8 April 2026
Bhargav Krishna spoke to Dialogue Earth – “The materials a home is built with determine a resident’s ability to cope with heat. You might work in a covered space, but if it’s poorly insulated, and you return to a house made of heat-trapping materials with no ventilation, you don’t recover at night”.
As the Effects of Rising Summer Heat Get Worse, Indian Women Street Vendors are Paying a Heavy Economic Price
Live Mint | 22 April 2026
Aditya Valiathan Pillai says it is “important” to address heat as a cross-sectoral issue, including its economic implications, rather than viewing it solely as a health issue. “It is important that we take the heat debate out of just a conversation on health and broaden it to include how extreme heat is impacting health, livelihoods and well-being in general. The economic threat is driving the health threat and vice-versa,” he adds.
What does India’s new Paris Agreement pledge mean for climate action?
Carbon Brief | 27 March 2026
Navroz K Dubash told Carbon Brief that India’s new pledge falls into an “ongoing pattern” of NDCs that “under-commit and will overcomply”, a description he says also fits China’s recent pledge. He elaborated: “This pattern suggests that statements of ambition are no longer the driver of climate action, if indeed they ever were. Instead, indications of implementation on the ground – real domestic policy and investment trends – are the more useful benchmark of progress.”
India Raises Climate Ambition, Targets 60% Clean Power by 2035
AFP | 25 March 2026
“The emissions intensity target represents a very modest increase compared with its potential. While India may well reach beyond this level, the target will further erode trust in multilateral negotiations. The pledge to increase renewables capacity is more significant and welcome, but this will only translate to real impact through greater generation shares” – Aman Srivastava told AFP.
Speaking engagements
“We must build policy around exposure to air pollution. Ultimately, what we breathe is what impacts us.” Ishita Srivastava and Arunesh Karkun spoke in the webinar ‘PM 2.5 at the Centre: Rethinking Air Quality Policy in India’ organised by Asar on 17 April 2026. Watch the full conversation here: https://youtu.be/Nd6dUrRpWR8
Tamanna Dalal spoke in the panel, “Invisible Exposure: Rethinking Heat Metrics and Protection Pathways for Informal and Gig Workers”, at the Global Heat and Cooling Forum organised by NRDC on 21-22 April 2026. She pointed out how, if implemented well, many actions within the HAPs could be beneficial to the workers. For example, shade, public water points, and even long-term systemic actions like training health staff to treat heat illnesses. “A lot more needs to be done outside the ambit of HAPs through parallel occupational laws. Mainstreaming of heat in various Indian occupational laws, with stricter enforcement, will be needed to protect workers from heat”, she added.
Dr Purvi Patel spoke in the panel, “Invisible Exposure: Rethinking Heat Metrics and Protection Pathways for Informal and Gig Workers” at the Global Heat and Cooling Forum organised by NRDC on 21-22 April 2026. She highlighted the need for greater scientific rigour in heat–health research, particularly in assessing heat-related illnesses, and the need to involve medical and public health professionals. “There is no doubt about heat’s impact on both outdoor and indoor workers, particularly where high physical activity combines with inadequate cooling. However, the resulting vulnerability is less about heat itself and more about the absence of basic safeguards. Examining upstream drivers of risk and assessing the health impacts of long-term adaptation measures are critical”, she added.
Aditya Valiathan Pillai spoke in the panel, “Governance Pathways for Strengthening Heat Resilience in the Global South” at the Global Heat and Cooling Forum organised by NRDC on 21-22 April 2026. He said – “There is a need to be electorally salient to show that they are doing things to show visible action to merge it with other problems. How do we write best-in-class policies that also drive incentives for implementation at the local level? Where can the incentives at the heart of our heat action plan be located? It is interesting to see the focus on mitigation funds. Incentives might come through the finance commission mechanism and they could also motivate action. Having accountability, compliance, and transparency through the judiciary and focussing on communicating visible actions to local elected representatives, and frontline bureaucrats may also be helpful. Together, all of these might help move the needle quicker.”
The South Asia Hub of the Global Heat Health Information Network was formally launched at the NRDC Global Heat and Cooling Forum in New Delhi on 21 April 2026. It aims to connect local actors to inform policy, implement practical interventions, and reduce heat risks, particularly for vulnerable populations. At the launch, Bhargav Krishna underscored a critical gap as well as an opportunity in how we respond to extreme heat. He emphasised the need to deepen our focus on epidemiological, or health-specific heat thresholds, while bridging two essential priorities: advancing rigorous science and ensuring it meaningfully informs policy. “At the same time, progress cannot be measured by data alone. It must remain grounded in people’s lived realities, livelihoods, and well-being. This is the space we hope to build through the South Asia Hub: where science and policy come together, without losing sight of those most affected,” he said. The hub is being hosted at Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW) with partners – SFC, Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), BRAC James P Grant School of Public Health, and UNESCAP.
Mukta Naik moderated the panel ‘Policy Takeaways’ at the event, ‘Climate Justice for Home-Based Workers: Voices, Evidence, and Action’ organised by WIEGO and SEWA Delhi on 23 March 2026. She spoke on the importance of workers’ voices, especially home-based workers who are often invisible, in policymaking because heat impacts are very varied. Mukta also emphasised the need for robust data about how workers experience heat, its impacts on their household decisions, including on education and health, that influence vital human development outcomes, and what kind of interventions are beneficial to them.