Latest News

Report says India's CO2 emissions from the power sector have fallen for the second time in four decades.

Report says India's CO2 emissions from the power sector have fallen for the second time in four decades.

India's carbon emissions from the power sector decreased by 1% in the first half 2025, primarily due to the addition of clean energy and a lower demand for electricity, according to a report. This is only the second decline in almost 50 years.

According to an analysis of Carbon Brief by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, the fall in electricity demand was primarily due to record additions of clean-energy capacity and unusually warm weather.

The Helsinki-based think-tank attributed 65% to the decline in fossil-fuel generation, 20% to a faster expansion of clean-energy, and 15% to increased hydropower output.

This analysis is based upon official data collected by different government agencies and ministries on fuel consumption, production of industrial goods and electricity generation.

CREA reported that India added 25.1 gigawatts of non-fossil power in the period January-June, a 69% increase from the previous record. This is enough to produce nearly 50 terawatt-hours (TWh), annually.

Hydropower production increased as a result of lower temperatures and rain between March and may, which was 42% higher than normal.

CREA reported that fossil fuel generation dropped by 29TWh while total electricity generation increased by 9TWh.

The growth in oil demand also slowed, which contributed to the overall emissions decline. However, steel and cement emissions rose dramatically due to government infrastructure spending.

CREA stated that India's emissions from the power sector could reach a peak before 2030, if the clean energy growth continues and if demand stays within projections. CREA said that the sector had historically accounted half of India's growth in emissions.

The country is looking at adding 500 GW of renewable energy by 2030. (Reporting and editing by Yagnoseni das, Sethuraman N R and Janane Venkatraman).

(source: Reuters)