Climate Change and COP Summits -Hot topics for UPSC GS-1 and 3  explained

Climate Change and COP Summits –Hot topics for UPSC GS-1 and 3  explained

 I. CLIMATE CHANGE

1. Meaning

Climate Change refers to long-term shifts in temperature, precipitation, and weather patterns primarily caused by anthropogenic activities like burning of fossil fuels, industrial emissions, deforestation, land-use change, etc.
It leads to global warming, driven by Greenhouse Gas (GHG) accumulation in the atmosphere.

2. Evidence of Climate Change (Scientific Basis)

  • Rising Global Temperatures (IPCC notes ~1.1°C rise since pre-industrial era)
  • Glacial Retreat (Himalayan glaciers receding)
  • Sea-level Rise (thermal expansion + ice melt)
  • Ocean Acidification (impacting corals, fisheries)
  • Extreme Weather Events (heatwaves, cyclones, floods, droughts)
  • Biodiversity Loss (coral bleaching, species extinction)

3. Causes of Climate Change

(A) Natural Causes

  • Volcanic activity
  • Solar radiation variations
  • Ocean circulation changes
  • Milankovitch cycles (orbital variations)

(B) Anthropogenic Causes

  • Burning of coal, oil, natural gas
  • Industrial emissions
  • Transport sector emissions
  • Deforestation and land-use change
  • Agriculture (methane from livestock & paddy)
  • Waste management (landfill methane)

4. Impacts of Climate Change (with Indian Context)

(A) Environmental Impacts

  • Increased frequency & intensity of cyclones (e.g., Amphan, Fani, Tauktae)
  • Erratic Southwest Monsoon, floods (Assam, Kerala), droughts
  • Heatwaves in North India (IMD alerts)
  • Himalayan glacial retreat → GLOFs (Glacial Lake Outburst Floods)

(B) Economic Impacts

  • Crop yield loss affecting food security (rice, wheat)
  • Fishery & coral ecosystem collapse
  • Infrastructure damage (coastal regions)
  • Increased disaster management expenditure

(C) Social & Health Impacts

  • Vector-borne diseases (malaria, dengue)
  • Urban heat island effect
  • Climate-induced migration
  • Water conflicts (inter-state river tensions)

5. India’s Vulnerability

India is extremely climate vulnerable due to:

  • Large agrarian population
  • Long coastline (7,500+ km)
  • Himalayan ecosystem
  • High population density
  • Monsoon dependence

Reports:

  • IPCC AR6 lists India among hotspots for heat stress, floods, sea-level rise
  • Germanwatch Global Climate Risk Index consistently ranks India among high-risk countries

6. Mitigation vs Adaptation (UPSC Concept Clarity)

Mitigation = Reduce emissions

Examples:

  • Renewable energy (solar, wind)
  • Energy efficiency
  • Carbon sinks (afforestation)
  • Electric vehicles
  • Green hydrogen

Adaptation = Adjust to impacts

Examples:

  • Climate-resilient crops
  • Early-warning systems
  • Heat action plans
  • Coastal embankments
  • Water conservation (Jal Shakti Abhiyan)

II. COP SUMMITS (Conference of the Parties)

1. What is COP?

COP = Conference of the Parties, the decision-making body under:

  • UNFCCC (United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change)

It brings nations together annually to negotiate climate action.

2. Key International Frameworks

(A) UNFCCC (1992)

  • Rio Earth Summit
  • Stabilize GHG concentrations
  • Principle of Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR)

(B) Kyoto Protocol (1997)

  • Legally binding emission reduction targets for developed countries
  • Mechanisms: CDM, Joint Implementation, Emissions Trading

(C) Paris Agreement (2015)

Transformational climate deal at COP21 (Paris):

  • Limit warming to well below 2°C, aim for 1.5°C
  • NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) by every nation
  • Stocktake every 5 years
  • Climate finance: $100 billion/year

3. Select Important COP Summits

COPLocationSignificance
COP1Berlin (1995)Berlin Mandate
COP3Kyoto (1997)Kyoto Protocol
COP7Marrakesh (2001)Marrakesh Accords
COP13Bali (2007)Bali Roadmap
COP15Copenhagen (2009)Copenhagen Accord (2°C goal)
COP17Durban (2011)Green Climate Fund
COP21Paris (2015)Paris Agreement (NDCs, 1.5°C)
COP24Katowice (2018)Katowice Rulebook
COP26Glasgow (2021)Net-zero push, coal “phase-down”
COP27Sharm el-Sheikh (2022)Loss & Damage Fund
COP28Dubai (2023)First Global Stocktake, phase-out debate
COP29Baku(2024)Carbon Market rules
COP30   Belem (2025)Adaptation finance tripling, 59 Adaptation indicators

4. India’s Role in COP & Climate Diplomacy

India’s Position

  • Emphasizes CBDR + Equity
  • Opposes “carbon colonialism”
  • Advocates climate justice for Global South

India’s Commitments (Paris Agreement)

India updated its NDCs in 2022:

  • Reduce emissions intensity by 45% by 2030
  • 50% cumulative electric power capacity from non-fossil sources by 2030
  • Net-zero by 2070 (announced at COP26)

5. India’s Climate Initiatives

National Policies

  • National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) with 8 Missions:
    • Solar Mission
    • Energy Efficiency Mission
    • Sustainable Habitat Mission
    • Water Mission
    • Himalayan Ecosystem Mission
    • Green India Mission
    • Sustainable Agriculture Mission
    • Strategic Knowledge Mission

Flagship Initiatives

  • International Solar Alliance (ISA) (with France)
  • Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI)
  • National Solar Mission
  • Faster Adoption of Electric Vehicles (FAME)
  • Hydrogen Mission (Green Hydrogen policy)
  • UJALA, UDAY, PAT scheme (energy efficiency)
  • PM-KUSUM (solar pumps)
  • Cleaner cooking (PM-Ujjwala)
  • National Adaptation Fund for Climate Change

III. CONCLUSION

Climate change represents the greatest global collective-action challenge of the 21st century. COP summits provide an institutional platform to negotiate science-based mitigation and adaptation pathways while upholding climate justice and equity. For India, striking a balance between development aspirations and ecological sustainability is crucial to achieving a resilient and low-carbon future.

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