|
SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
PMs address at the New Delhi
High Level Conference on Climate Change: Technology
Development & Transfer
October 22, 2009, New Delhi
I am very pleased to be here in your midst today
to inaugurate this very important Conference. I extend
a very warm welcome to His Excellency President Nasheed
of the Maldives. Mr. President, you are a respected
friend of our country and an untiring champion of global
cooperation to address this formidable challenge of
climate change. You are very welcome in both your capacities.
I also extend a very warm welcome to all the distinguished
Ministers and other participants at this Conference.
Developing countries face critical challenges in enhancing
their capacity to adapt to climate change. President
Nasheed has been most eloquent champion in raising awareness
across the world of the threat to the survival of small
island states from global warming.
In our country, we are deeply conscious of the vulnerability
faced by least developed countries and island states.
We too have large and vulnerable populations living
in our island chains and in low-lying coastal areas.
Whatever modest capabilities we possess to tackle this
problem will be at the disposal of countries like the
Maldives.
The challenge before the developing world is how to
achieve our developmental goals while at the same time
minimising ecological costs.
Developing countries cannot and will not compromise
on development. But as responsible members of the global
community we also do recognise that we, along with other
members of the global community, must do our bit to
keep our emissions footprint within levels that are
sustainable and equitable.
Technology and its diffusion will be a key element
in meeting the challenge of climate change.
The key issue before us is that of developing the appropriate
technologies and then collapsing the time from their
first commercialization to their large-scale adoption
in poorer developing countries. We need technology solutions
that are appropriate, that are affordable and that are
truly effective.
They have to be backed by the establishment of appropriate
financial arrangements to facilitate technology transfers.
Industrialized countries have the capacity to shift
to new energy efficient processes even if it involves
additional costs. Developing countries do not have this
capacity and it is therefore only appropriate that the
shift in their case should be facilitated by adequate
financial support. Hopefully as the new technology spreads
more widely the costs involved will fall making it much
more affordable. Initially however, the transition in
developing countries will need critical financial support.
The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change should play a leading role in directing effective
and collaborative actions in this vital area.
We believe that continuation of the process of incentivizing
the adoption of climate friendly technologies in developing
countries in the second commitment period of the Kyoto
Protocol should be a priority global concern.
The Clean Development Mechanism under the Kyoto Protocol
has proved to be an effective vehicle for promoting
sustainable development in many developing countries,
while helping developed countries accomplish the abatement
of their GHG emissions at lower cost. CDM revenues often
take some of the sting out of the risks associated with
the introduction and adoption of newer and cleaner technologies.
Climate friendly and environmentally sound technologies
should be viewed as global public goods. This implies
that the IPR regime applied to those goods should balance
rewards for innovators with the need to promote the
common good of humankind. Suitable mechanisms must be
found that will provide incentives for developing new
technologies while also facilitating their deployment
in developing countries at affordable cost.
Such an approach has been adopted successfully in the
case of pharmaceutical technologies for the benefit
of HIV/AIDS victims in developing countries. The moral
case of a similar approach for protecting our planet
and its life support system is equally compelling.
An important barrier to technology adoption is the
poor absorptive capacities of large number of developing
countries. This situation cannot be remedied through
forced harmonization of standards. We have to strengthen
the limited innovation capabilities in many countries
to realize the potential of these new technologies.
India has proposed the setting up of an international
network of Climate Innovation Centres (CICs) which should
act as vehicles for enhancing technology innovation
and capacity building in developing countries.
These Centres could assess and identify locally-relevant
key technologies and support their successful and faster
development and deployment. Each such centre could focus
on a key technological product that addresses climate
change. Their task may also include addressing the diverse
range of capacity, business and regulatory barriers
to the development and diffusion of the specific technologies.
The CICs in different countries may also cross-fertilize
each other by sharing of learning-by-doing
experience.
Indias development path has been relatively benign
from the climate change perspective thus far. Our per
capita consumption of primary energy is less than one-fourth
of the world average and our per capita emission of
CO2 is among the lowest in the world. Moreover, the
energy intensity of our output has been continuously
declining in the last 30 years.
Nevertheless, as GDP rises, our energy use and total
emissions will rise unless new technology enables us
to increase energy efficiency and reduce emissions intensity.
I have stated earlier that we stand committed to ensure
that our per capita carbon emissions will never exceed
the average of the per capita carbon emissions of developed
countries. Equating GHG emissions across nations on
a per capita basis is the only just and fair basis for
a long-term global arrangement on climate change which
is truly equitable.
I have no doubt that if developed countries make a
serious effort to bring their per capita emissions within
tolerable levels, they will unleash large resources
directed towards research. This will generate an upsurge
of technology that will make it much easier for other
countries to follow suit.
Meanwhile, we are acting to do what we can within our
limited capacity. We are committed to further evolving
and pursuing our sustainable growth strategy for reasons
of our own vital national interests. India will adopt
purposive domestic actions to enhance its climate change
management. The focus of our efforts will be targeted
towards achieving time-bound outcomes related to the
energy efficiency of our economy, the share of renewable
in our fuel mix and several other sector specific initiatives.
These objectives are reflected in our National Action
Plan on Climate Change which contains 8 National Missions
focussing on both mitigation and adaptation.
Needless to say, a comprehensive, balanced and above
all, an equitable outcome at Copenhagen will enable
us to do much more in all these areas.
As we move towards Copenhagen, we must keep to the
mandate for our deliberations agreed upon by consensus
at Bali. Our objective is to enhance the implementation
of the principles and provisions of the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change.
We need to work towards a significantly enhanced and
scaled-up set of arrangements for technology under a
multilaterally supervised mechanism. We need to act
across all the stages of the technology cycle
from research leading to new breakthroughs, to the development
& adoption of new technologies and to the transfer
of existing & mature technologies.
We should endeavour to create a global platform to
bring together the best scientific and technological
resources from across the world in a collaborative effort
to deliver transformational technologies for the future.
We have good examples to guide us, including the ITER
project or fusion energy project and the work of the
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research
(CGIAR).
The expectations from your Conference are indeed very
high. People everywhere, both within our governments
and civil society at large, will keenly follow your
deliberations. I assure you that India will do its utmost
to play a constructive role in global efforts to combat
climate change.
|