Cannot solve climate issues without transforming cities, says Dr Jitendra Singh
Decarbonizing of cities and buildings should be the highest priority for the public and private sectors, and it needs to be done at scale, pace and by using an integrated and digitalized approach to bring systemic efficiency.
India’s Science and Technology Minister, Dr Jitendra Singh, delivered this strong message at the Roundtable on “Net Zero Built Environment with Connected Communities” at Global Clean Energy Action Forum-2022 in Pittsburgh on 23 Sept 2022.
“We cannot solve climate change without transforming our cities and buildings, and this requires massive efforts from the private and public sectors as it is possible with today’s technologies,” said Dr Jitendra Singh, the head of India’s high-level Joint Ministerial Delegation of S&T and Ministry of Power, New & Renewable Energy at the forum.
He pointed out that increasingly, cooling is recognized as a developmental need that is linked with achieving many Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
“Demonstration and Deployment, investment, technology are the key challenges to achieve net zero connected communities at a global level.”
Dr Jitendra Singh pointed out that the development of a robust R&D innovation ecosystem will, inter alia, involve further development of scientific manpower in the area, requisite academic and R&D institutional capacities, support for R&D activities on various facets of cooling, including but not limited to refrigerants, cooling equipment, passive building design interventions, not-in-kind technologies and new emerging technologies. These efforts will also require industry preparedness to assimilate new technologies.
He also called for important actions to address challenges like a global Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with respect to enhancing the R&D, as well as Deployment, Knowledge and technology sharing related to demand driven solutions. Further, a tailored financing plan is needed for feasible funding sources and aggregating member countries’ demand for the potential designing of a global tender, procurement process.
Dr Jitendra Singh informed the Ministers and Delegates at the forum that his Ministry of Science and Technology has actively engaged several industry players, especially for demonstration and deployment.
“Today, we have over 78 industries participating in the Building Energy Efficiency and Smart Grid Program.”
The Minister, however, acknowledged that the decarbonization of cities is a multifaceted challenge and requires a holistic approach and systemic efficiency.
Alongside buildings, the electrification of private and public transport plays a pivotal role in not only achieving net zero emission targets, but also improving urban air quality.
“The public and private sectors need to work closely to ensure the implementation of research outcomes,” the Minister underlined.
Dr Jitendra Singh said that three major actions for which public and private sectors can come together to achieve planning and demonstrations of net zero connected communities are:
Catalysing effective capital reallocation and new financing structures, including through scaling up climate finance;
Lowering technology costs with R&D, nurturing industrial ecosystems, collaborating across value chains to reduce cost;
Establishing compensating mechanisms to address socioeconomic impacts, through economic diversification programs, reskilling and redeployment programs.
Highlighting the measures taken by India, Dr Jitendra Singh highlighted that his Ministry has supported research development and deployment of technologies with an investment of US$34.3 million during the last decade.
“We have strengthened the R&D infrastructure and forced bilateral and multilateral collaborations through R&D programs in the field of Building Energy Efficiency and Smart Grids,” the Minister underlined. fiinews.com