An energy transition driven by ethics
An Energy Transition Driven by Ethics
UPSC Study Note | GS-III (Energy, Environment) + GS-IV (Ethics in Policy)
1. At a Glance
- The article advances a normative argument: the pace and pathway of energy transition must be ethically calibrated — not driven by short-term geopolitical shocks or Western pressure — to protect national sovereignty, industrial stability, and energy equity. [S1]
- Why UPSC-relevant: intersects GS-III (energy security, climate change) and GS-IV (ethics in policy); also feeds GS-II (India's foreign policy, multilateral climate diplomacy).
- India is uniquely positioned — the world's third-largest energy consumer, heavily import-dependent for crude, yet the fastest-growing major renewable market. This creates a just transition dilemma: too fast risks industrial collapse; too slow risks geopolitical hostage-taking. [S2][S3]
- The Strait of Hormuz crisis (2026) serves as the proximate trigger forcing a rethink of the ethics of dependency vs. the ethics of speed in the green transition. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- March 16, 2026: Simon Stiell, Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC, addressed EU officials in Brussels, calling fossil fuel dependency "a ripping away of national security and sovereignty." [S1]
- Context: Ongoing U.S.-Israel-Iran war led to the near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz, triggering force majeure declarations by Indian state-run refineries. [S1][S4]
- Crude oil basket price for India surged to US$ 113.57/barrel by March 11, 2026, from a FY2025-26 average of US$ 62–70/barrel. [S4]
- India's Petroleum Ministry scrambled to diversify, announcing that ~70% of crude imports now route outside the Strait. [S4]
- India achieved 50% non-fossil installed electricity capacity milestone in June 2025 — five years ahead of its NDC target — providing a partial buffer. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
Global Energy Transition — Key Milestones
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1992 | UNFCCC adopted — first multilateral framework on climate |
| 2015 | Paris Agreement; countries submit NDCs with fossil fuel phase-down goals |
| 2021 | COP26 Glasgow — first explicit reference to "phase down" of coal; Greta Thunberg calls talks "blah blah blah" |
| 2022 | Russia-Ukraine war exposes European fossil fuel dependency; accelerates EU green push |
| 2023 | COP28 Dubai — landmark call to "transition away" from fossil fuels (not "phase out") |
| 2025 | India crosses 50% non-fossil electricity capacity; adds 44.51 GW renewables (nearly double 2024's 24.72 GW) [S2] |
| Jan 2026 | India's first VLCC terminal launched at Mundra, Gujara — reduces Hormuz dependency [S4] |
| Mar 2026 | Hormuz crisis; UNFCCC Executive Secretary flags ethics of fossil fuel reliance [S1] |
Indian Trajectory - India's NDC (2015, updated 2022): achieve 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030; 50% cumulative installed electricity from non-fossils by 2030 (achieved June 2025). [S2] - Coal still ~55% of power generation; oil import dependency >88% of total crude requirement. [S3][S4] - India's "just transition" policy framework acknowledged in UNFCCC-CIF study: declining coal employment requires proactive re-skilling investment. [S3]
4. Core Static Facts
Energy Security — India's Import Dependence - >88% of India's total crude requirement is imported [S4] - ~60% of crude (pre-diversification) came from West Asia/Gulf [S1]; post-crisis diversification: ~70% now outside Hormuz [S4] - ~60% of India's LPG imports transit Hormuz [S4] - ~65% of natural gas imports from Qatar and UAE [S4] - Strait of Hormuz: ~20 million barrels/day of crude & oil products (2025 average); ~25% of world's seaborne oil trade [S4]
Renewable Energy — India's Achievements - Total RE installed capacity (as of 2025): India among top 5 globally - RE capacity added Jan–Nov 2025: 44.51 GW (vs. 24.72 GW same period 2024) [S2] - Key missions: National Green Hydrogen Mission, PM-KUSUM, PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana [S2] - NDC 2022 target: 500 GW non-fossil by 2030; 50% electricity from renewables by 2030 [S2]
Implementing Bodies - Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) — nodal for RE targets - Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas — crude security - NITI Aayog — energy policy coordination [S5] - UNFCCC — global framework [S3]
Key Terms - Just Transition: Managing energy shift so workers/communities in fossil-fuel sectors are not left behind - Force Majeure: Act of God/unforeseeable event; invoked by Indian refineries on Hormuz closure - NDC (Nationally Determined Contribution): Country-specific climate pledges under Paris Agreement - Critical Minerals: Lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, rare earths — controlling chokepoints of renewable supply chains [S2]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- India's crude oil basket spike to US$ 113.57/barrel (Mar 2026) inflates the import bill, widens Current Account Deficit, and pressures the rupee. [S4]
- Premature fossil fuel abandonment without a "take-off ramp" risks industrial collapse in energy-intensive sectors (steel, cement, chemicals). [S1]
- RE sector expanding rapidly but critical mineral supply chains (lithium, cobalt) are dominated by China, creating a new import dependency replacing the old one. [S2]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Strait of Hormuz carries ~25% of world seaborne oil; India's vulnerability demonstrates that fossil fuel dependency equals geopolitical subservience (Stiell's formulation). [S1][S4]
- The counter-argument: renewables replace oil dependency with critical mineral dependency — and those mineral supply chains may be equally or more concentrated geopolitically. [S2][S1]
- India's VLCC terminal at Mundra (Jan 2026) and diversification to West African (Nigeria, Angola) crude reduce Hormuz exposure. [S4]
- Western nations built strategic reserves and industrialized on fossil fuels; denying the same developmental pathway to emerging economies raises questions of climate justice and historical equity. [S1]
Environmental
- India's RE additions (44.51 GW in 2025) reduce carbon intensity of the grid. [S2]
- Coal phase-down without transition support risks coal-belt economic collapse in states like Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha. [S3]
- Critical mineral mining for EV batteries and solar panels carries its own environmental and ecological costs (tailings, water use, biodiversity).
Ethical / Governance
- Core ethical tension: Speed (demanded by climate science) vs. Equity (demanded by development justice for the Global South).
- Simon Stiell's framing — fossil dependency as a sovereignty violation — reframes energy security as a moral/ethical issue, not just an economic one. [S1]
- The "just transition" concept requires that the costs and benefits of energy transition are distributed fairly — workers, regions, and countries must not bear disproportionate burdens. [S3]
- Historical emitters (US, EU) have greater ethical obligation to fund green transition in emerging economies.
Social
- Coal sector employment is declining; RE jobs growing but geographically and skill-wise mismatched with affected coal communities. [S3]
- Vulnerable communities — particularly Adivasi communities in coal belt states — face land displacement from both continued mining and new RE projects (solar farms, wind parks).
- PM Surya Ghar scheme targets rooftop solar for households, improving energy access equity. [S2]
Scientific / Technological
- National Green Hydrogen Mission (2023): target 5 MMT green hydrogen by 2030, potential to decarbonize hard-to-abate sectors. [S2]
- Intermittency of solar/wind requires large-scale battery storage — itself dependent on critical minerals.
- "Remove, target, and shift" strategy: India systematically removing fossil fuel subsidies, targeting clean energy investment, shifting consumption patterns. [S2]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- June 2025: India achieves 50% non-fossil installed electricity capacity — five years ahead of NDC schedule. [S2]
- Jan–Nov 2025: India adds 44.51 GW of renewable capacity — nearly double the same period in 2024. [S2]
- January 2026: First VLCC terminal at Mundra launched — reduces Hormuz-dependent crude supply risk. [S4]
- March 11, 2026: Indian crude basket hits US$ 113.57/barrel; government activates 24×7 petroleum stock monitoring control room. [S4]
- March 16, 2026: UNFCCC Executive Secretary Simon Stiell addresses EU in Brussels — frames fossil fuel dependency as a sovereignty and ethics issue, citing India's Hormuz exposure as an "abject lesson." [S1]
- Economic Survey 2025-26: India adopts "development-centred, whole-of-economy climate strategy" integrating adaptation, mitigation, and behavioral change. [S2]
- India's crude import diversification: ~70% now flowing outside the Strait of Hormuz, sourced from ~40 countries. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- India achieved 50% non-fossil installed electricity capacity in June 2025 — five years ahead of its NDC 2030 target. [S2]
- The Strait of Hormuz carries approximately 20 million barrels/day of crude oil and oil products (2025 average), representing ~25% of world seaborne oil trade. [S4]
- Simon Stiell is the Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC (not UNEP). [S1]
- India's renewable capacity addition Jan–Nov 2025: 44.51 GW — nearly double the 24.72 GW added in the same period of 2024. [S2]
- India's first VLCC terminal was launched at Mundra (Gujarat) in January 2026. [S4]
- India's crude oil basket price surged to US$ 113.57/barrel on March 11, 2026 during the Hormuz crisis. [S4]
- India's state-run refineries declared force majeure following the Strait of Hormuz closure — this is an insurance/contract term for an unforeseeable act.
- Critical minerals relevant to renewable energy supply chains: lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, and rare earth elements. [S2]
- India's National Green Hydrogen Mission targets 5 MMT green hydrogen production by 2030.
- India sources crude from approximately 40 countries as of 2026; ~70% now outside the Strait of Hormuz. [S4]
- PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana targets rooftop solar installations for households — distinct from PM-KUSUM (which targets farmers). [S2]
- At COP21 (2015), countries submitted NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) under the Paris Agreement — India's updated NDC targets 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030.
- The phrase "transition away" from fossil fuels (not "phase out") was the language agreed at COP28 Dubai (2023) — a deliberately weaker formulation.
- The "just transition" concept in energy policy requires managing the fair distribution of benefits and burdens of moving away from fossil fuels. [S3]
- ~88% of India's total crude requirement is imported; ~60% of LPG imports transit the Strait of Hormuz. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers - GS-III: Energy security; energy transition; environment and climate change; India's infrastructure - GS-II: India's foreign policy; multilateral institutions (UNFCCC, COP); bilateral relations (West Asia) - GS-IV: Ethics in policy-making; intergenerational equity; justice; public policy dilemmas
Specific Syllabus Headings - GS-III: "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment"; "Infrastructure: Energy" - GS-IV: "Ethics and Human Interface: Essence, determinants and consequences of Ethics in human actions"; "Probity in Governance"
Plausible Mains Questions
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"The energy transition debate is fundamentally an ethical debate about equity, sovereignty, and historical responsibility. Critically examine in the context of India's energy policy." (GS-III/GS-IV, 250 words)
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"The Strait of Hormuz crisis has exposed the strategic vulnerability of India's energy import dependence. Evaluate India's options for energy security diversification while maintaining its climate commitments." (GS-II/GS-III, 250 words)
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"A 'just transition' away from fossil fuels requires that the costs and benefits are distributed equitably across workers, regions, and nations. Discuss the challenges India faces in achieving this." (GS-III, 250 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| India's NDC and Climate Commitments | Direct — India's specific targets, timelines, and international obligations under Paris Agreement |
| Critical Minerals and Supply Chain Geopolitics | Renewables dependency shifts from oil to lithium/cobalt — new geopolitical vulnerability |
| National Green Hydrogen Mission | India's flagship hard-to-abate sector decarbonization strategy |
| Just Transition and Coal Belt Economies | Social/ethical dimension of moving workers out of fossil fuel employment |
| India's West Asia Policy (West Asian Diplomacy) | Why India's geopolitical exposure in Hormuz matters; energy-diplomacy nexus |
| COP Process and Global Climate Negotiations | Backdrop for Stiell's Brussels statement; India's negotiating positions |
| PM-KUSUM, PM Surya Ghar Schemes | Domestic policy instruments driving the RE expansion numbers |
| Strait of Hormuz — Strategic Chokepoints | Geography of energy vulnerability; prelims maps/MCQs |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Wrong official: Simon Stiell is Executive Secretary of UNFCCC — not UNEP (which is Inger Andersen) and not WMO. Confusing these is a common MCQ trap.
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Milestone timing: India's 50% non-fossil installed capacity was achieved in June 2025 — NOT 2030 (the original NDC deadline). "Ahead of schedule" is the key fact; examiners may present 2030 as the achievement year.
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"Phase out" vs. "transition away": COP28 (2023) used "transition away from fossil fuels" — NOT "phase out." This softer language was a deliberate compromise. Aspirants confuse the two.
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PM-KUSUM vs. PM Surya Ghar: PM-KUSUM targets farmers (agri-pumps, solar); PM Surya Ghar targets households (rooftop solar, free electricity). Mixing these is a standard trap.
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Critical mineral dependency as a counter-argument: Aspirants often treat renewables as fully "immune" to supply-chain disruptions — but the article itself (and Stiell's qualified statement: "true in part") flags that mineral dependency is the new vulnerability. Don't present renewables as a complete solution to geopolitical risk.
11. Sources
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[S1] "An energy transition driven by ethics" — The Hindu (Vasudevan Mukunth, March 26, 2026, International Print Edition, Page 9) — Article excerpt provided — (Tier 4)
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[S2] "India's Expanding Role in the Global Energy Transition" — PIB Press Release, January 27, 2026 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2219208 — (Tier 1)
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[S3] "Just Transitions in India — A study by the Climate Investment Funds" — UNFCCC.int — https://unfccc.int/sites/default/files/resource/Inputs%20from%20Climate%20Investment%20Funds_%20India_CIF%20Case%20Study.pdf — (Tier 2)
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[S4] Strait of Hormuz and India Oil Imports — multiple sources cited in search results including PIB/Akashvani News ("India secures 70% of crude oil imports Outside Strait of Hormuz"), government control room announcements, and VLCC Mundra terminal launch — (Tier 1/4 composite)
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[S5] NITI Aayog Energy Division — https://niti.gov.in/divisions/division/energy — (Tier 1)
Note: All Tier 4 article facts (from The Hindu excerpt) are cross-verified where possible against Tier 1/2 sources. Where cross-verification was not possible (e.g., specific Stiell quotes), the article itself is cited as primary.