India’s Bioeconomy and Green Transition: Towards Inclusive and Sustainable Growth
Context:
- India’s bioeconomy has grown 16 times in the last decade (2014–2024), reaching $165.7 billion and contributing 4.25% of GDP.
- Despite this growth, rural–urban disparities persist in green technology adoption, renewable energy access, and sustainable livelihoods.
- These challenges highlight the need for a landscape-driven green economy model that balances economic growth, social inclusion, and ecological sustainability.
1. Understanding Green Economy
- A green economy fosters sustainable development while reducing environmental risks and ecological scarcities.
Key Features:
- Low Carbon: Promotes renewable energy, e-mobility, and energy efficiency.
- Resource Efficiency: Encourages recycling, waste-to-energy, circular economy, and sustainable agriculture.
- Inclusive Growth: Integrates women, rural communities, and MSMEs into green value chains.
- Ecosystem Restoration: Protects biodiversity, soil health, water resources, and forests.
- Technology-Driven: Uses AI, IoT, and digital platforms for monitoring, smart grids, and carbon markets.
Importance:
- Climate Resilience: Reduces vulnerability to extreme weather events and ensures food–water security.
- Employment Generation: Expected 35 million green jobs by 2030.
- Energy Security: Lowers dependence on fossil fuels, supporting Aatmanirbhar Bharat.
- Global Competitiveness: Helps India tackle carbon border taxes and expand sustainable exports.
- Social Equity: Bridges the rural–urban divide through clean energy, sustainable farming, and women’s participation.
Constitutional & Policy Framework:
- Article 21 & 48A: Right to life and State’s duty to protect environment.
- Panchayati Raj Institutions (Article 243G): Empowered for local planning and natural resource management.
- Policies & Missions: National Bio-Energy Mission, BioE3 Policy (2024), National Action Plan on Climate Change, Bharat 6G Vision, MGNREGA green initiatives.
2. Emerging Trends in India’s Green Economy
- Rapid Bioeconomy Growth: 4.25% of GDP, led by biofuels, bioplastics, and pharmaceuticals.
- Renewables & Ethanol Push: Achieved 20% ethanol blending; 250% growth in renewable capacity (2015–2021).
- Employment Potential: 35 million green jobs by 2030; women hold only 11% of rooftop solar jobs.
- Rural–Urban Divide: Urban centres attract EVs, green jobs, and green infrastructure, rural areas lag.
- Regional Disparities: Maharashtra, Karnataka, Gujarat, Telangana dominate; eastern and tribal-rich states underrepresented.
3. Challenges and Trade-offs
Disparities in Access:
- Urban areas receive majority of green investments; rural areas lag in irrigation efficiency, renewable adoption, clean tech.
- Example: North-eastern states contribute <6% to bioeconomy despite resource richness.
Energy Transition Dilemmas:
- Push for renewables alongside fossil fuel subsidies (up to 40%) undermines net gains.
- Solar pumps may incentivise groundwater over-extraction.
Industrial Pressure:
- Hard-to-abate sectors (steel, cement, power) contribute 23% of GHG emissions.
- Green technology costs >4x traditional options.
Socio-Economic Risks:
- Rapid transition may displace coal workers, MSMEs, small manufacturers.
- Agriculture-dependent households (58% of rural livelihoods) remain climate-vulnerable.
Gender & Social Gaps:
- Women in technical green roles: 1–3%.
- Tribal and marginal communities often remain beneficiaries rather than climate leaders.
Policy Fragmentation:
- Lack of inter-ministerial integration and weak enforcement reduce policy effectiveness.
4. Landscape Approach: A Way Forward
Integrated Planning:
- Treat landscapes as systems of land, water, biodiversity, energy, and markets.
- Conduct participatory assessments from village to macro level for ecosystem valuation.
Institutional Anchoring:
- Leverage 2.5 lakh PRIs and 12 million women-led SHGs for design, monitoring, and ownership.
Circular & Local Economies:
- Promote tribal-led bioeconomy models using non-timber forest produce and agri-waste reuse.
Gender Mainstreaming:
- Provide targeted training, leadership roles, incentives for women in solar, biofuels, waste-to-energy sectors.
Green Infrastructure & Innovation:
- Implement green budgeting, fiscal incentives, sustainable public procurement.
- Expand 100+ 5G/6G labs to green digital infrastructure.
Waste & Resource Management:
- Urban areas generate 75% of solid waste; rural areas struggle with unsegregated bio + plastic waste.
- Need SOPs, decentralized financing, and circular waste economy.
Conclusion:
- India’s green transition must move beyond urban-industrial focus towards a landscape-driven, community-based model.
- Integrating local resources, women’s leadership, tribal bioeconomy, and technology will enhance climate resilience and social equity.
- By 2047, India should aim for ecological regeneration, inclusive growth, and global climate leadership, not merely GDP expansion.
Source : The Hindu