A bit of a blur over India’s new carbon credit plan

Good — I now have rich, multi-source facts from Tier 1 (pib.gov.in, dst.gov.in, niti.gov.in, prsindia.org) and Tier 4 (downtoearth.org.in, business-standard.com), plus the article excerpt. Proceeding to write the study note.


India's New Carbon Credit Plan — UPSC Study Note

Topic: "A bit of a blur over India's new carbon credit plan" | The Hindu, 18 March 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2001 Energy Conservation Act enacted; BEE established 2002
2022 Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022 (No. 19 of 2022) passed; effective 1 January 2023 — first statutory mandate for a carbon trading scheme in India [S7]
Dec 2022 NITI Aayog releases report: "CCUS Policy Framework and its Deployment Mechanism in India" — first comprehensive policy scoping [S5]
2023 Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) notified under amended EC Act; BEE designated as administrator [S6]
Dec 2025 DST releases R&D Roadmap for CCUS — identifies hard-to-abate sectors; sets 750 mtpa CO₂ capture target by 2050 [S3]
Feb 1, 2026 Union Budget 2026-27: ₹20,000 crore allocated for carbon credit / CCUS programme [S1]

Predecessors / Related Initiatives: - Perform, Achieve and Trade (PAT) Scheme under BEE — predecessor energy-efficiency trading scheme; experience base for CCTS. - National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC), 2008 — policy ancestor. - India's NDC under Paris Agreement (updated 2022): reduce GDP emission intensity by 45% by 2030 from 2005 levels; 50% non-fossil power capacity by 2030. [S9]


4. Core Static Facts

Definitions: - CCUS: Technology suite that captures CO₂ from point sources (industrial stacks), then either utilizes it (in fuels, chemicals, materials) or stores it permanently in geological formations. - Hard-to-Abate Sectors: Industries where emissions arise from process chemistry (not just fuel combustion) — e.g., limestone calcination in cement, coking coal in steel — making electrification alone insufficient. - Carbon Credit Certificate: Issued under CCTS to obligated entities that reduce GHG emission intensity below prescribed norms in a compliance cycle; tradeable on designated exchanges. [S6] - GHG Emission Intensity: GHG emissions per unit of output (sector-specific metric).

Implementing Bodies:

Function Body
CCTS administration Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE), Ministry of Power
CCUS R&D Roadmap Department of Science and Technology (DST)
Policy framework Ministry of Power (parent of BEE)
Climate policy coordination MoEFCC (National Communication to UNFCCC)
Earlier scoping NITI Aayog (2022 CCUS report)

Enabling Law: - Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022 (No. 19 of 2022) — Section 14(w) empowers Central Government, in consultation with BEE, to specify a Carbon Credit Trading Scheme. [S6][S7]

Key Numbers:

Parameter Value
Budget allocation (FY 2026-27) ₹20,000 crore
CO₂ capture target by 2050 750 million tonnes per annum (mtpa)
Jobs created (FTE, phased) 8–10 million
Obligated entities (compliance regime) 700–800 industrial units
CCTS effective from 1 January 2023
India Net Zero target 2070

Target Sectors (DST Roadmap): Power, Steel, Cement, Refineries, Chemicals [S3]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The ₹20,000 crore carbon credit allocation in Union Budget 2026-27 is anchored in CCUS for hard-to-abate industries, not a farmer income scheme. [S1][S2]
  2. Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022 is the statutory basis for India's Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS); it came into effect on 1 January 2023. [S7]
  3. Under CCTS, Section 14(w) of the EC Act empowers the Central Government, in consultation with BEE, to notify the carbon credit trading scheme. [S6]
  4. BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) — established 2002 under Energy Conservation Act, 2001 — is the administrative body for CCTS; under Ministry of Power. [S6]
  5. India's CCUS R&D Roadmap was released by Department of Science and Technology (DST) in December 2025. [S3]
  6. CCUS target sectors per DST Roadmap: Power, Steel, Cement, Refineries, Chemicals — classified as "hard-to-abate" industries. [S3]
  7. India's CCUS ambition: capture 750 million tonnes of CO₂ per annum by 2050. [S3]
  8. Full-scale CCUS deployment could generate 8–10 million FTE jobs in India on a phased basis. [S3]
  9. Approximately 700–800 industrial units are designated as obligated entities under the CCTS compliance regime. [S6]
  10. India's Net Zero target year is 2070 — the CCUS programme is explicitly embedded in this commitment. [S3]
  11. NITI Aayog released the first CCUS policy framework report in December 2022 — precursor to the DST roadmap. [S5]
  12. Under CCTS, obligated entities that reduce GHG emission intensity below prescribed norms earn Carbon Credit Certificates — tradeable on designated exchanges. [S6]
  13. The CCTS is an intensity-based (not absolute cap) trading scheme — entities that overperform sell credits to underperformers. [S6]
  14. The "hard-to-abate" classification applies because emissions in steel and cement arise from industrial process chemistry (e.g., calcination, coking), not merely fuel combustion. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: - GS-III: Environment & Ecology (carbon markets, climate change mitigation, CCUS); Economy (budget allocation, industrial policy, green jobs) - GS-II: Governance (government communication, policy design, regulatory bodies like BEE)

Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment; Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's ₹20,000 crore carbon credit programme reflects ambition but suffers from a communication deficit." Examine the design of the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) and evaluate whether the Union Budget 2026-27 allocation is adequate to achieve India's CCUS targets by 2050. 2. Critically analyse the role of Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) in India's Net Zero 2070 pathway. What are the technological, economic and governance challenges in scaling CCUS for hard-to-abate sectors? 3. "India's carbon market risks being both an industry compliance tool and a public narrative misunderstood as a farmer income scheme." Discuss the institutional design gaps that allowed this confusion and suggest corrective measures.


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Perform, Achieve and Trade (PAT) Scheme Predecessor energy-efficiency trading under BEE; conceptual foundation for CCTS
India's Updated NDC (2022) CCUS & CCTS are instruments to meet India's Paris Agreement targets; need to know specific NDC numbers
UNFCCC Article 6 (Paris Agreement) Governs international carbon market linkages; CCTS credits may eventually be traded under Art. 6.2/6.4
Green Hydrogen Mission / National Mission for Clean Energy Complementary decarbonization for hard-to-abate sectors; budget often discussed together
Agricultural Carbon Credits / Soil Carbon Sequestration The "other" part of the debate in the article; India has no formal scheme yet — likely to come up as a gap
EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) Global benchmark; often asked in comparison questions; India's CCTS differs (intensity vs. absolute cap)
Energy Conservation Act, 2001 and 2022 Amendment Statutory backbone; direct Prelims target for "which law, which section" questions
NITI Aayog CCUS Policy Framework, 2022 First comprehensive Indian CCUS document; foundational report

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong implementing ministry: CCTS is under Ministry of Power (via BEE), NOT MoEFCC — confusing these is extremely common. MoEFCC handles UNFCCC communications and environmental clearances, not carbon trading.
  2. Conflating two separate things: The ₹20,000 crore is for CCUS / hard industry, not for farmers. Agricultural carbon credits are a separate policy aspiration with no current formal scheme under CCTS.
  3. Wrong year for CCTS legal basis: EC Amendment Act enacted in 2022, effective 1 January 2023 — do not confuse with EC Act 2001 (parent act) or earlier PAT notifications.
  4. DST vs NITI Aayog roles: The CCUS R&D Roadmap was released by DST (December 2025); the 2022 CCUS Policy Framework was by NITI Aayog — they are different documents with different purposes.
  5. Intensity-based vs. cap-and-trade confusion: India's CCTS is GHG emission intensity-based (per unit output), unlike the EU ETS which sets an absolute emissions cap — treating them as equivalent in answers will lose marks.

11. Sources


Note: The Hindu article (primary source) was inaccessible by web-crawl; content is drawn from the article excerpt provided. All other facts are independently corroborated from Tier 1–4 sources as listed above.