Play heroic role at Climate talks, Greenpeace appeals to Modi

The NGO urges India to pledge a total shift to renewable energy in India by 2050.

December 04, 2015 02:06 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 04:19 pm IST - Paris:

Activists shout slogans against burning of fossil fuels at the CoP21 venue in Paris on Friday.

Activists shout slogans against burning of fossil fuels at the CoP21 venue in Paris on Friday.

Greenpeace, the NGO which has had a troubled relationship with the NDA government, on Friday urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to play a heroic role at the ongoing CoP21 Paris Climate Change conference, and pledge a total shift to renewable energy in India by 2050.

The Executive Director of Greenpeace International Kumi Naidoo expressed the NGOs sympathy with those suffering from floods in Chennai, and said those who had to respond to it faced great challenges. Climate change was not made by India, but the country was paying the price. 

Major polluters should be held accountable for historical greenhouse gas emissions that had produced climate change, the statement said. A shift to total renewable energy access by 2050 would be the only way to keep a rise in global temperature under 1.5 degrees C, which was essential to save the most vulnerable countries. 

For India, the conference presented the opportunity to play a historic role. A complete shift to renewable energy would produce millions of clean energy jobs, to which there could be a transition. This should be done without affecting those who were currently working in the fossil fuel energy sector. 

In several actions against NGOs, the Narendra Modi government recently cancelled the international license of Greenpeace, which is registered in Tamil Nadu, alleging fraud. The NGO has been approaching the courts to stay afloat, winning partial reprieves.

The following is the full text of the Greenpeace appeal to the Prime Minister: 

Dear Prime Minister Modi,

I write to you from Paris to express my solidarity as India faces devastating floods in Chennai. I am an African, but my ancestors hailed from the region that is suffering. My thoughts - and the thoughts of the organisation I lead - are with the victims. Those responsible for the humanitarian response face great challenges. We wish them success.

I have read in media reports that you have explicitly linked floods in Chennai to human-induced climate change. You are not the only one. Experts suspect that the Chennai floods, and the earlier flooding in other parts of Tamil Nadu, are examples of climate change impacts.

Prime Minister, we recognise that India is not historically responsible for this problem. How could it be? India’s contribution to the accumulation of carbon in our atmosphere from burning oil, coal and gas is comparatively small. The same can be said for Africa - the continent to which my ancestors were brought as indentured servants by the British colonialists - and Tuvalu and Kiribati and the other vulnerable countries whose leaders came to Paris, demanding a meaningful, ambitious agreement.

Climate change was not made in India, but the price is being paid in India. Could the grounds for a solution now be laid by India? Could you, the political leader of nearly one-fifth of humanity, make history by securing a deal for the world?

Greenpeace and civil society stands with India in demanding accountability from the major polluters. We also stand with vulnerable people in demanding action from the major polluters of the future. We recognise that richer countries are still not doing enough. But if India moves, in the process forcing richer countries to  move too, then it will not just be campaigners like me who will be grateful to you, but billions of people not yet born.

As you know, there is a debate here in Paris about whether the cap on warming should be set at 1.5 or 2 degrees, and whether to set a target of 100% renewable energy by 2050, or later in the century. I urge you to consider the plight of the most vulnerable people in India and around the world, and embrace that long-term goal of 100% renewable energy access for all by 2050. That would be the best way to keep alive the possibility that temperature rises can be kept below 1.5 degrees.

I see the potential for India to play an heroic role at these talks. And why wouldn’t it? India can be a leader in the coming renewable energy revolution.  India can generate millions of new jobs in the clean energy sector - ensuring a just transition from dirty energy jobs to clean energy jobs, so that workers in the fossil fuel sector are not punished. India can take the millions of people who are energy poor out of energy poverty much faster by relying on new technologies instead of yesterday’s fuel sources. We acknowledge and congratulate India on the targets set for renewable energy (especially solar and wind) until 2022. Indeed, we’ve seen the potential in solar and decentralised renewable energy models, in the course of our involvement with a solar energy project in Dharnai, a village in Bihar.

I have seen the huge potential of clean energy to change lives in India - bringing jobs, energy access, water for agriculture, and other benefits. Greenpeace was delighted to see you launch the Solar Alliance here in Paris on Monday. We share your vision of bringing progress to millions of people via decentralised renewable energy. We wish the Solar Alliance success so that it can bring -  as you put it - a “sunrise of new hope, not just for clean energy but for villages and homes still in darkness”. It is only decisive action like this that can prevent the disaster in Chennai from becoming the new normal.

The Paris climate agreement must signal a vision similar to that of the Solar Alliance you lead. We stand with you in your demand for a deal that serves the interests of India and the wider world – and also for the people of Chennai. And we hope you will stand with the most vulnerable and help deliver success here in Paris by supporting 100% renewables for all by 2050. Because that is the best way to keep temperature rises below dangerous levels.

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