Renewable Energy Is Key to Fighting Climate Change
Climate change is real. Global warming is the root cause of Climate Change. Far too often climate change is dismissed as an issue for the future. Numerous studies have shown that the earth temperatures are rising. According to the World Health Organization air pollution is responsible for the premature deaths of over 7 million people worldwide per year. Climate change is having a devastating impact on the lives of children in poorer countries like India and Bangladesh — whose childhoods are being washed away. Over 50 children in the age group of one month to 14 years die of cancer every day in India, according to a recent study, which also highlights the significant monetary burden of the disease and lack of advanced treatment options in the country.
A number of cities in the Persian Gulf region may be unlivable by the end of the century due to global warming, if humans do not curb greenhouse gas emissions, according to new research. Every year we’re seeing new and undeniable climate events, droughts, extreme weather events intensifying, Greenland ice sheets melting at unprecedented rate – decades ahead of scientific projections, and our oceans are acidifying with methane plumes rising up from the ocean floor. And unless we reverse course regarding the fossil-fuel-burning path chosen, there will be even more such early deaths attributed to the igniting of these fuels. Climate change is our single greatest security threat. Pollution control should be the top priority for India.
The answers to climate change are very simple. The world needs to create a future powered by renewable energy. Renewable energy (especially solar and wind) is a game-changer for most countries in the world. It has the potential to re-energize the world by creating millions of new jobs, achieve energy independence, and combating climate change. Even providing 100 percent renewable energy is not a fantasy for someday, but a reality today. Many countries have already set a target to be 100 percent renewable in the very near future.
World leaders have it in their power to make a real and measurable difference putting the planet on track. What is needed now is a new focus and global efforts by governments, corporations, citizens and nonprofits to comply with the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). I urge them to do so now. It is our moral and ethical obligation to prevent this human tragedy because it is totally preventable. I remain unwaveringly convinced that if the air-pollution crisis is resolved, we resolve the climate-warming issue in the process. I call that a win-win proposition for humanity. What we need in India is a bold new climate and energy policy. And we need a whole new set of social and technical knowledge to get us there. We need transformational thinking and new policy tools. We also need major legislation such as putting a price on carbon. However, we also need to know if those steps will even be enough to keep us below the scientifically endorsed and inspirational goal included in the Paris Agreement of limiting global average temperature increases between 1.5 degrees Celsius and 2 degrees Celsius by 2100. We need to immediately find solutions to solve this pollution problem. Aggressively expand large-scale deployment of both centralized and distributed renewable energy including solar, wind, hydro, biomass, and geothermal to ease the strain on the present transmission and distribution system — and allow more off-grid populations to be reached. Provide incentives to kick start Renewable Energy programs for massive Solar Roof-tops over 100 million Solar Rooftops with Home Energy Storage Battery like “Tesla Power Wall,” etc.
Promote energy efficiency in the economy, notably in industry, transportation, buildings and appliances. Make energy efficiency a high priority by expediting the development and implementation of cost-effective energy efficiency standards. To reduce the long-term demand for energy, engage states, industrial companies, utilities and other stakeholders to accelerate energy efficiency investments such as large-scale nationwide use of LED lamps, etc. India has the technical potential to meet its current power needs more than 10 times over with solar energy alone. There are no insurmountable technological or economic barriers to tapping India’s vast potential to achieve 100 percent renewable energy. India can easily build a 100 percent renewable energy system at costs comparable to or less than what it would have to spend to continue its reliance on fossil and nuclear power. There is no downside to this transition. We can make India the world leader and super power in renewable energy, and eliminate suffering of millions of people in Delhi and many other cities from pollution problems.