Green
Growth Strategy for Sustainable Development : India’s Green growth Strategy
Dr. Anamika Kaushiva
Assistant Professor, Economics,
Sahu Ram Swaroop Mahila Mahavidyalaya, Bareilly
ABSTRACT:
The global ecosystem is finite and economic growth is pushing it beyond
limits - making development unsustainable. Today, climate change, a symptom of unsustainable
development, is
threatening the basic elements of life. Economic thinkers
across the globe began to recognize the need to build a prosperous and secure future based on policies that
will sustain and expand the environmental resource base. The world needed a new
way of assessing development which would include human and ecological well
being within its definition.
Sustainable development growth
strategy evolved as the economic thinkers realized that growth policies must be
redefined to ensure that the needs of the present are fulfilled without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
Asia and Pacific countries moved
a step further and introduced ‘Green Growth strategy’ - a strategy to eliminate
the tradeoffs between economic growth and investment and gains in environmental
quality and social inclusiveness. A green economy requires social, economic and
environmental dimensions of sustainable development to work in a mutually
reinforcing fashion. In India,
environmental sustainability has become a major challenge. For an environmentally sustainable future,
India needs to value its natural resources, and ecosystem services to better. India can make green growth a reality by introducing
strategies for reduction in environmental degradation, conservation and
efficient use of energy, preservation of biological
diversity and climate adaptation in agriculture. This alone will help India to maintain its growth rate without
jeopardizing future environmental sustainability
KEYWORDS: Sustainable Development, Environmental
Degradation, Environmental Sustainability, Green Growth , Green Investment
The development and growth
theories of the early twentieth century focused on issues of industrialization,
employment generation, increase in national income and percapita income. In
1940’s national income accounting was introduced to assess ‘growth’ and
development’ of an economy. The major limitation of using GDP as an indicator of growth was that
standard of living and human well being were not given due consideration.
Environmental issues that are increasingly threatening the planet today were
considered beyond the scope of economics. Environmental damages due to rapid
industrialization were treated merely as ‘externalities’.
However, today it is accepted as a universal truth that global ecosystem is
finite and economic growth strategies are making development unsustainable.
Economic thinkers across the globe began to recognize the need to build a prosperous and secure
future based
on policies that will sustain and expand the environmental resource base. The
world needs a new way of assessing development which would include human and
ecological well being within its definition.
This growing realization led to a debate across the world over how it was
possible to achieve economic growth without unsustainably degrading the
environment. Economists began to develop a new approach to growth, growth with
equity, management of natural, produced, and human
capital for the welfare of today and
tomorrow. This broadened the view of ‘Development’ to ‘Sustainable Development’ and
in 1987 the
Brundtland Commission published the first volume of “Our Common Future,”
stating that it was time to frame policies which “…meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own
needs”.
The concept of green growth
originated in the Asia and Pacific Region. At
the Fifth Ministerial conference on Environment and Development, March 2005,
Seoul, fifty two governments and other stakeholders from Asia and The Pacific
region agreed to pursue the path of “Green Growth” and adopted a declaration
‘The Seoul Initiative Network on Green Growth’. The objective was to develop strategies
of developing a green economy to eliminate the tradeoffs between economic
growth and investment and gains in environmental quality and social
inclusiveness.
This paper attempts to trace the
path of the concept of sustainable development to the green growth concept, to
define green growth, outline green growth indicators and then discuss suitable
green growth strategies for growth path that will ensure optimum utilization
and sustenance of resources and ecosystem on which the wellbeing of the coming
generation relies. The first section briefly traces the path from the concept
of ‘Sustainable Development’ to ‘Green Growth’. The second section focuses on
the concept of green growth – its definition, objectives and indicators. The
third section discusses construction of green growth strategies – constraints
to green growth. The fourth section briefly outlines green growth strategies
adopted in India.
I: From Sustainable Development
to Green Growth
The 1972 Stockholm Conference on
the Human Environment and the 1980 World Conservation Strategy of the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature shifted the focus of world
leaders from growth and development to environmental issues stemming from
industrialization - mineral
depletion, shortage of nonrenewable resources, pollution, CO2 emissions,
depletion of biological resources- which had hitherto been considered as externalities. The
United Nations saw a growing need for an organization to address environmental
challenges which were intertwined with economic and social conditions.
In 1984 the Brundtland Commission
came into being and in 1987, published the first volume of “Our Common Future.”
Brundtland argued that "...the "environment" is where we live;
and "development" is what we all do in attempting to improve our lot
within that abode. The two are inseparable." The Brundtland Commission's
mandate was to: “re-examine the critical issues of environment and development
and to formulate innovative proposals to deal with them; strengthen international
cooperation on environment and development”. The commission realized that for
sustainable development, issues of rapidly increasing population, food
insecurity, environmental degradation, pollution, declining natural
nonrenewable resources resources, are interlinked and cannot be treated in
isolation one from another. Environment does not exist as a sphere separately
from human actions and cannot be treated in isolation. Development strategies
cannot be confined to making a country richer without paying attention to the
long term consequences of our actions.
Higgins (1996) refined the definition of Sustainable development stating
that it “is a concept which encourages both economic growth and a healthy
environment...” Roberts ( 2004 ) stated that sustainable development strategies
aimed at promoting “the effective and efficient use and management of natural
resources; the promotion of a hierarchy of waste solutions that places the
avoidance of waste at the top of the list and the disposal of unsorted waste at
the bottom of the list of options; The introduction of new methods and
techniques for design, production, distribution and end-of-life management,
which emphasize the avoidance or minimization of waste and environmental
damage; The establishment of new economic activities based on opportunities for
the production of environmental goods and services and for the distribution,
maintenance and eventual disposal of such products; ……..energy conservation
environmental sound construction, green transport and a wide range of other
occupational areas;…...”
The Declaration on Sustainable Development and the Plan of Implementation
stated that - “We recognise that poverty eradication, changing consumption and
production patterns, and protecting and managing the natural resource base for
economic and social development are overarching objectives of, and essential
requirements for, sustainable development.” Thus three major categories were
identified under ‘what is to be sustained’ – nature, life support system and
community – through the pillars of sustainable development – economic
development, social development and environmental protection.
Sustainable development implies meeting the basic needs of all and
extending to all the opportunity to fulfill their aspirations for a better
life. Issues of food security, the loss of species and genetic resources, are
interlinked. Living
sustainably means living off earth’s natural income without depleting or
degrading its natural capital. Societies can become more environmentally
sustainable through economic development strategies dedicated to improving the
quality of life for everyone without degrading the earth’s life-support systems
Prescott-Allen,
who founded and chaired several influential IUCN-The World Conservation Union
projects, defined "sustainability" (which he said is just another way
of saying "the good life") as a combination of (a) a high level of
human well-being, and (b) the high level of ecosystem well-being that supports
it. In other words, according to sustainable development thinkers, ecosystem
well-being is more than low resource consumption as well as more than the sum
of a nation's environmental policies and practices. It encompasses many
dimensions like: Conserving the
diversity and quality of natural, land and water ecosystems; Restoring the
chemical balance of the atmosphere around the world; maintaining all species;
and limiting the resource use through minimization of wastage.
In the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development, also known as the Earth
Summit, held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
from June 3 to June 14, 1992 major agreements were signed - The Framework
Convention on Climate Change to reduce the threat of global warming which in turn led to the Kyoto Protocol, The Convention
on Biological Diversity for preserving the Earth’s biological diversity through
the protection of species and ecosystems, and United
Nations Convention to Combat Desertification. The earth summit
culminated to the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development, Agenda
21, and the Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD).
Agenda 21 is a non-binding, voluntarily implemented action plan of the United Nations with regard to sustainable development. It
encompasses issues of social and economic dimensions for combating poverty, especially in developing countries, promoting
health, achieving a more sustainable population, conservation and management of resources for development - atmospheric protection, combating deforestation, protecting fragile
environments, conservation of biological diversity, control of pollution . It
envisaged strengthening the
role of major groups in
implementation of
sustainable development strategy through science, technology transfer, education, international institutions and financial mechanisms. The full
implementation of Agenda 21 and the commitments to the Rio principles, were
strongly reaffirmed at the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) held
in Johannesburg, South Africa from 26 August to 4 September 2002.
United Nations General Assembly in its 57th Session in
December 2002, proclaimed the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development
for the period 2005 – 2014 with UNESCO as its lead agency. The goal of the
UNDESD is to integrate practices of sustainable development into all aspects of
education and learning for all sections of the society.
Despite greater awareness of the links between environment and development,
real progress towards sustainable development has been slow. Most economies
show failure to link environment and development in decision making.
Development strategies continue to sidetrack the need to sustain the ecosystem
services on which long-term development goals depend. Lack of adequate focus to
environmental issues,
population growth, wasteful and unsustainable use of natural resources,
pollution, poverty, exclusion of the environmental costs of resource use from
the market prices of goods and services, make growth unsustainable.
At the Fifth Ministerial conference on Environment and
Development, March 2005, Seoul, fifty two governments and other stakeholders
from Asia and The Pacific region adopted a declaration ‘The Seoul Initiative
Network on Green Growth’ for achieving growth with environmental
sustainability.
In June 2009, The OCED Ministerial Council meeting
declared that green and growth go hand in hand and decided to develop a green
growth strategy to bring together economic, environmental technological,
financial and development aspects into a comprehensive framework. Subsequently
OCED became a major proponent of Green Growth strategy.
In April 2010, ASEAN submit in Hanoi stated its
determination to promote green growth. In May 2010, UNESCAP sixty second
session, the Inchon Declaration on Green growth was adopted. In June 2010,
Republic of Korea established the Global Green Growth Institute which was later
elevated to an international organization at the Rio Conference in June 2012.
In the G20 Seoul summit, green growth was recognized
as an inherent part of sustainable development. In February 2012, the World
Bank, UNEP, OCED and GGGI launched a Green Growth Knowledge Platform to bring
together international organizations supporting green growth and green economy.
II. Green growth – Definition and Objectives
OCED, 2011, defines Green growth as “fostering economic growth and
development while ensuring that natural assets continue to provide the
resources and environmental services on which our well‐being relies.”
UNEP defines a green growth process as “….one that results in improved
human well‐being and social equity, while significantly reducing
environmental risks and ecological scarcities.… The key aim for a transition to
a green economy is to eliminate the trade‐offs between economic growth and
investment and gains in environmental quality and social inclusiveness” (UNEP
2011).
ICC Green Economy task Force states “…Economic growth and environmental
responsibility work together in a mutually reinforcing fashion while supporting
progress on social development. Business and industry have a crucial role in
delivering economically viable products, process, services and solutions
required for transition to a green economy”.
Thus objectives of Green growth are -
· Restructuring the economy to synergize
economic growth and environmental protection.
· Sustainable management of natural capital.
· Reduction in the intensity of natural
resource consumption and environmental impacts of economic activities.
· To pursue low carbon green growth path.
· To make ecosystem accounting an integrated part of the assessment of the
environment.
Green growth
seeks to build on sustainable development framework by fully intergrating the
economic and environmental pillars (which to date have been seen as
incompatible) to promote strong and sustainable growth. (Samans, 2013). It is
growth that ensures efficient use of natural resources, ensures minimum
pollution and negative environmental impacts. The concept of green economy
rests on the economy, the environment and the social pillars of sustainable
development. Greening growth (GG) and moving towards a greener economy (GE)
implies (i) pricing externalities and valuing natural assets for the long-run
services they provide; (ii) innovation as a means of breaking with
unsustainable growth paths; (iii) the creation and dissemination of new, more
environmentally sustainable technologies, goods, and services; and (iv)
sectoral shifts and changes in comparative advantage that inevitably imply
winners and losers.
III. Green Growth Strategies and Constraints to Green Growth
The need for green growth strategies towards
green growth, OCED, 2011, states “At
the core of green growth are constraints or distortions in the economy which
inhibit returns to “green” investment and innovation, i.e. activities which can
foster economic growth and development while ensuring that natural assets
continue to provide the resources and ecosystem services on which our
well-being relies. Green growth strategies should focus on the most binding
constraints, identifying major environmental priorities, and investigating any
overlap between structural economic reform priorities and major constraints to
green growth”.
UNEP has classified the green economy indicators into
three major categories: (i)) indicators of issues and targets to be addressed
by green economy policies, (ii) indicators of policy interventions, and (iii)
indicators of impacts for ex ante assessment and ex post monitoring and
evaluation of adopted policies. In December 2012, UNEP published a 11 framework
document “Measuring Progress towards an Inclusive Green Economy,” and it is
preparing a manual on using indicators to develop green economy policies. The
manual is to be applied in all the countries where UNEP provides advisory
services
Major constraint to green growth that have to be
addressed: externalities, government failures; market failures; and market
imperfections.
• Externalities - These are
uncompensated damages imposed by one economic agent on another. For example,
Water pollution because factory owners
maximize profits from production by releasing untreated effluents into a river
rather than incurring the costs of waste water treatment.
· Government
failures - policies like
fossil fuel subsidies which reduce overall economic activity and result in
environmental damage.
· Market
imperfections - features
of markets - inherent imperfections like economies of scale or monopoly
characteristics in industries which are not resolved by government
intervention.
· Market failures
associated with public goods - Many environmental assets are public-goods (non
rival and non excludable). Therefore the providers of public goods cannot
exploit the market, through product and price differentiation, for maximization
of profits. Thus public goods are underprovided by private markets.
· Missing or incomplete
property rights. In case of common pool resources for example, a forest or fishery, the
lack of property rights leads to overexploitation and depletion of the
resource. In the absence of quotas, exploitation by users of the common pool
drives up costs to the point at which economic profits drop to zero.
Green growth
strategies should establish environmental priorities, diagnose key market
constraints, and match these with structural economic reform. A green economy
requires social, economic and environmental dimensions of sustainable
development. This requires innovation, collaboration and governance.
A framework of green growth policy must include four
aspects -
• Redefining the wealth of an economy to include all
types of capital: natural, human, physical. The economic policies have to be
formulated keeping in mind growth tradeoffs – depletion of nonrenewable
resources and slow conversion of renewable resources like soil and fisheries
into nonrenewable resources.
• Incorporating the dual role played by natural
capital in production – by providing inputs and providing ecosystem services
which affect social welfare.
• Increasing public policy intervention in management
of natural capital and increasing investment in natural capital.
• Encouraging innovations in greening growth.
Economists have recommend a variety
of incentive-based instruments to reduce environmental damage and
depletion—such as taxes, tradable permits, subsidies, deposit refund schemes,
and refunded emission payments and quotas. Price instruments must be used for
ensuring that the prices paid for goods and services reflect their full social
costs, including externalities for example Carbon pricing (e.g. carbon tax,
emissions trading). Countries in the OECD have imposed some 375 environment-related
taxes and about 250 environment-related fees and charges /taxes on fuels and
cars, tax water usage in agriculture.
IV. Green Growth in India
“Green growth involves rethinking growth strategies
with regard to their impact(s) on environmental sustainability and the
environmental resources available to poor and vulnerable groups.” - Thirteenth
Finance Commission Report, India
The greening of the economy requires growing new industries, along
with developing and disseminating new technologies. Green industrial
policies can help disseminate new technologies and develop new competitive
sectors. Greening agricultural production can be achieved by
conservation agriculture, which simultaneously yields environmental benefits
(by reducing pollution of waterways from nutrients and increasing carbon
sequestration in soils); increases the efficiency of production
(by reducing the use of energy inputs); increases resilience (by
frequently rotating crops); and increases agricultural productivity
in the long run (by reducing erosion and enhancing soil structure).
Various adopted in measures for green growth have been introduced in India.
• Environmental
Protection Act, 1986 - to implement the
decisions of the United Nations
Conference on the Human Environments. The
act aims at the protection and improvement of the human environment and the
prevention of hazards to human beings, other living creatures, plants and
property. The Act is designed to provide a framework for central government
coordination of the activities of various central and state authorities
established under previous laws, such as the Water Act and the Air Act.
• Energy
Conservation Act, 2001- to provide for
efficient use of energy and its conservation.
The Bureau of Energy Efficiency was setup as an agency of the Government of India, under the Ministry of Power created in March 2002 to develop
programs which would increase the conservation and efficient use of energy in
India. The government proposed to
make it mandatory for all appliances in India to have ratings by the BEE
starting in January 2010. The mission of Bureau of Energy Efficiency is to
"institutionalize" energy efficiency services, enable delivery
mechanisms in the country and provide leadership to energy efficiency in all sectors
of the country.
• Biological
Diversity Act, 2002 - for preservation of biological diversity in India, and provide mechanism for
equitable sharing of benefits arising out use of traditional biological
resources and knowledge. The Act was enacted to meet the obligations under Convention on Biological Diversity.
• National
Environmental Policy, 2006 - intended to be a guide to action; in
regulatory reform, programmes and projects for environmental conservation; and
review and enactment of legislation, by agencies of the Central, State, and
Local Governments.
• Integrated
Energy Policy of 2008 - to meet the demand for energy services of all
sectors including the lifeline energy needs of vulnerable households in all
parts of the country with safe, clean and convenient energy at the least-cost.
• National Action Plan on
Climate Change, 2008 - to
identify measures and steps to advance climate change-related actions in the
public and private domains following the Kyoto Protocol. Eight National
Missions in the areas of solar energy, enhanced energy efficiency, sustainable
agriculture, sustainable habitat, water, Himalayan ecosystem, increasing the
forest cover and strategic knowledge for climate change were incorporated under
the Plan reflecting India’s vision and domestic strategies for sustainable
development and the steps it must take to realize it.
i.
National Mission for Enhanced Energy Efficiency: Current
initiatives are expected to yield
savings of 10,000 MW by 2012, mandating specific energy consumption decreases
in large energy-consuming industries,
introduction of energy incentives, including reduced taxes on
energy-efficient appliances; and financing for public-private partnerships to
reduce energy consumption through
demand-side management programs in the municipal, buildings and
agricultural sectors.
ii.
National Mission on Sustainable Habitat: To promote
energy efficiency as a core component of urban planning, the plan calls for -
extending the existing Energy Conservation Building Code; a greater emphasis on
urban waste management and recycling, including power production from waste;
strengthening the enforcement of automotive fuel economy standards and using
pricing measures to encourage the purchase of efficient vehicles; and incentives
for the use of public transportation.
iii.
National Water Mission: With water scarcity projected to
worsen as a result of climate change, the plan sets a goal of a 20% improvement
in water use efficiency through pricing and other measures.
iv.
National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem:
conserve biodiversity, forest cover, and other ecological values in the
Himalayan region.
v.
National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture: The plan aims
to support climate adaptation in agriculture through the development of
climate-resilient crops, expansion of weather insurance mechanisms, and
agricultural practices.
vi.
National Mission for a “Green India”2011: Goals include
the afforestation of 6 million hectares of degraded forest lands and expanding forest
cover from 23% to 33% of India’s territory. The Green India Mission puts the
“greening” in the context of climate adaptation and mitigation, aiming to
enhance ecosystem services like carbon sequestration and storage (in forests
and other ecosystems), hydrological services and biodiversity; along with
provisioning services like fuel, fodder, small timber and NTFPs. During
2011-12Rs.49.94 crores was released to 21 States for carrying
out preparatory activities
V.
CONCLUSION:
Green growth is a subset of sustainable development.
It fosters the necessary conditions for innovation, investment and competition
which ensure that growth is consistent with resilient ecosystems. India’s achievement of rapid growth has been clouded
by a degrading environment and a growing scarcity of natural resources despite
growing awareness of the issues. Today, India ranks 155th among 178 countries accounting for all measurable environmental
indicators. Further, 13 0f 20 most
polluted cities in the G-20 countries are in India. The deteriorating environment is taking its toll on
the people’s health and productivity – and costing the economy a staggering Rs. 3.75 trillion each year (US$80 billion) - or 5.7
percent of GDP. Thus
growth has been achieved at the price of worsened air quality and other
environmental degradation. Poverty remains both the cause and consequence of
resource degradation and environmental degradation. Environmental sustainability therefore
could become the next major challenge as India surges along its projected
growth trajectory, For an environmentally sustainable future, India needs to
value its natural resources, and ecosystem services to better inform policy and
decision-making India can make green growth a
reality by introducing strategies to reduce environmental degradation at the
minimal cost of 0.2% to 0.4% of average annual GDP growth rate. This alone will
help India to maintain its growth rate without jeopardizing future
environmental sustainability.
VI.
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Received on 13.12.2015
Modified on 24.01.2016
Accepted
on 07.02.2016
© A&V Publications all right reserved
Research J. Humanities and Social Sciences. 7(2):
April - June, 2016, 82-88
DOI: 10.5958/2321-5828.2016.00014.0