Intent and outcome


Intent and Outcome: India's Climate Ambitions vs. Budget Allocations


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
CCUS outlay (2026-27) ₹20,000 crore over 5 years [S1]
PM Surya Ghar allocation 2026-27 ₹22,000 crore (up from ₹17,000 crore RE) [S1]
PM Surya Ghar launch February 2024; target 1 crore households [S6]
PM Surya Ghar total outlay ₹75,021 crore [S6]
Installations (Jan–Dec 2025) ~14.43 lakh RTS systems; ~18.14 lakh households [S6]
First solar PV localisation outlay ₹4,500 crore (Budget 2021) [S2]
Five climate sectors (Budget 2026-27) Cement/steel/aluminium/fertilisers; decentralised solar; green irrigation pumps; green hydrogen; nuclear energy [S1]
CBAM sectors Electricity, hydrogen, cement, fertilisers, aluminium, iron & steel [S4]
CBAM impact on India exports Estimated ~−0.20% export reduction (OECD) [S5]
India's NDC (long-term) Net-zero by 2070; 50% non-fossil electricity by 2030; 45% emissions intensity cut vs. 2005 [S2]
Nodal body for CCUS policy NITI Aayog (Policy Framework, 2022) [S9]
CCUS R&D Roadmap released 2025 (PIB, Ministry of Science) [S3]
CBAM — India ministry response Ministry of Steel (Chintan Shivir on CBAM) [S4]
Global CCUS examples cited Norway, Canada, United States [S2]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana was launched in February 2024 with a total outlay of ₹75,021 crore. [S6]
  2. The scheme targets installation of rooftop solar in 1 crore (10 million) households by FY 2026-27. [S6]
  3. Budget 2026-27 allocated ₹22,000 crore to PM Surya Ghar, up from ₹17,000 crore (RE) in 2025-26. [S1]
  4. India's CCUS outlay in Budget 2026-27 is ₹20,000 crore over five years — i.e., ~₹4,000 crore/year. [S1]
  5. The NITI Aayog published India's CCUS Policy Framework (2022); the CCUS R&D Roadmap was launched in 2025. [S3][S9]
  6. India's first solar PV localisation allocation was ₹4,500 crore in Union Budget 2021. [S2]
  7. The five sectors targeted in Budget 2026-27's climate framework include: cement, steel, aluminium & fertilisers; decentralised solar; green irrigation pump sets; green hydrogen; and nuclear energy. [S1]
  8. EU CBAM covers: electricity, hydrogen, cement, fertilisers, aluminium, iron and steel. [S4]
  9. OECD estimates CBAM could reduce India's exports by approximately −0.20% overall. [S5]
  10. India's long-term net-zero target: 2070; 50% non-fossil electricity by 2030; 45% emissions intensity reduction vs. 2005 baseline. [S2]
  11. Operational CCUS examples noted in the article: Norway, Canada, United States. [S2]
  12. The Ministry of Steel organised a Chintan Shivir specifically on CBAM to prepare the sector. [S4]
  13. India's NDC for 2031–2035 was approved by Cabinet and submitted to UNFCCC. [S2]
  14. CCUS is especially relevant for hard-to-abate sectors where electrification cannot eliminate process emissions (e.g., cement, steel). [S3]
  15. As of December 2025, PM Surya Ghar had installed systems in only ~14.43 lakh households against a 1-crore target. [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

Detail
GS-III Environment: Climate change; energy; infrastructure; growth and development
GS-II Governance: Implementation of government policies; international agreements
GS-IV Ethics: Integrity in governance; policy commitments and accountability

Syllabus headings: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation; effects of liberalisation on the economy; bilateral/multilateral groupings (EU-India trade).

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's climate budget allocations reflect intent without outcome. Critically examine with reference to Budget 2026-27's provisions for CCUS, green hydrogen, and rooftop solar." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "The EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) transforms India's climate commitments from a moral obligation to an economic necessity. Analyse its implications for India's industrial decarbonisation strategy." (GS-III/GS-II, 15 marks) 3. "When a government's stated policy objectives are not matched by commensurate financial provisioning, what ethical questions arise? Discuss with reference to India's climate finance commitments." (GS-IV, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India's NDCs and Paris Agreement Legal and political basis for all climate budget commitments
Green Hydrogen Mission One of the five Budget 2026-27 climate sectors; viability depends on CCUS and renewable scaling
EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) Directly converts climate lag into export penalty for India's steel/aluminium
Perform Achieve and Trade (PAT) Scheme India's existing energy efficiency/carbon intensity mechanism — predecessor to formal carbon pricing
National Solar Mission / PM Surya Ghar Flagship renewable programme; execution gap illustrates the intent-outcome divide
Climate Finance & Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) India's negotiating position at COP — why developed-country finance commitments matter
Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022 Enabled carbon market framework and green hydrogen standards in India
Hard-to-Abate Sectors Policy Steel, cement, aluminium — at the intersection of CCUS, CBAM, and NDC compliance

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing PM Surya Ghar with PM-KUSUM: PM Surya Ghar targets residential rooftop solar (1 crore households); PM-KUSUM targets agricultural pump solarisation. Both are in Budget 2026-27's climate basket but are distinct schemes under different ministries.
  2. Misattributing CCUS to MoEF: CCUS R&D Roadmap is driven by Ministry of Science & Technology / NITI Aayog, not the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change.
  3. Overstating CBAM's immediate impact: CBAM is in transition/phased implementation; its full financial penalties phase in gradually — aspirants often treat it as already fully operative.
  4. Conflating net-zero 2070 with NDC 2030 targets: India's 2030 NDC (50% non-fossil electricity; 45% emissions intensity cut) is separate from the 2070 net-zero long-term goal — exam questions may test which year applies to which commitment.
  5. Assuming CCUS = proven technology ready for scale: Globally, CCUS has been expensive and uneven — the article explicitly states India is entering a pilot and demonstration phase, not industrial deployment. Treating the ₹20,000 crore as deployment funding (rather than R&D/pilot funding) is a common conceptual error.

11. Sources