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


2. Why in the News


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

Geopolitical / Strategic

Environmental

Ethical / Governance

Social

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India achieved 50% non-fossil installed electricity capacity in June 2025 — five years ahead of its NDC 2030 target. [S2]
  2. 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]
  3. Simon Stiell is the Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC (not UNEP). [S1]
  4. 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]
  5. India's first VLCC terminal was launched at Mundra (Gujarat) in January 2026. [S4]
  6. India's crude oil basket price surged to US$ 113.57/barrel on March 11, 2026 during the Hormuz crisis. [S4]
  7. India's state-run refineries declared force majeure following the Strait of Hormuz closure — this is an insurance/contract term for an unforeseeable act.
  8. Critical minerals relevant to renewable energy supply chains: lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, and rare earth elements. [S2]
  9. India's National Green Hydrogen Mission targets 5 MMT green hydrogen production by 2030.
  10. India sources crude from approximately 40 countries as of 2026; ~70% now outside the Strait of Hormuz. [S4]
  11. PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana targets rooftop solar installations for households — distinct from PM-KUSUM (which targets farmers). [S2]
  12. 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.
  13. The phrase "transition away" from fossil fuels (not "phase out") was the language agreed at COP28 Dubai (2023) — a deliberately weaker formulation.
  14. The "just transition" concept in energy policy requires managing the fair distribution of benefits and burdens of moving away from fossil fuels. [S3]
  15. ~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

  1. "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)

  2. "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)

  3. "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

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. "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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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


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.