ANNOUNCEMENTS
By Ranjana Ray Chaudhuri, Associate Professor and Head of the Departments of Natural and Applied Sciences and Regional Water Studies, TERI School of Advanced Studies
Air pollution is one of India’s deadliest health threats, causing 1.5 million deaths in a decade. A coordinated, science-led strategy is now reversing the trend, with strict regulations, biomass use, and cleaner fuels improving air quality—though much work remains.
In India, air has become a public health disaster, challenging both governance and public resolve. A slow, unseen threat that deprives people of years before their time, air pollution caused 1.5 million deaths in India between 2009 and 2019, as per the Lancet Planetary Health study. This accounts for nearly one in every six deaths nationwide. It is one of the country’s deadliest health threats, claiming more years of life lost than even cardiovascular or infectious diseases. Particulate pollution alone shortens the average Indian’s life by 5.3 years. In the Northern Plains, the worst-hit region, the number increases to about 8 years of life lost for nearly 521 million residents.
In 2019, the economic costs from premature deaths and illnesses linked to air pollution reached $36.8 billion, or 1.36% of India’s GDP 4 . This is a multi-faceted attack on health, society, and the economy, in the guise of an environmental issue. The problem looms over India like Damocles’ sword—a scepter that haunts our national productivity, stunts children’s growth, hampers adolescents’ lung and cognitive development and burdens hospitals.
CAQM as a Panacea
Faced with such a crisis, piecemeal interventions are no longer enough. India needs a science-backed authority with the mandate to cut across state lines and enforce tough decisions. The Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM), set up in 2020 and given statutory powers under the CAQM Act, 2021, has emerged as that very institution. Its jurisdiction spans Delhi-NCR and neighbouring states, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan, where it can issue binding directions to state agencies, impose environmental compensation, and prosecute non-compliance.
CAQM’s strategy has zeroed in on two critical fronts in the fight against air pollution: managing agricultural residue to curb stubble burning and driving industrial decarbonisation to cut emissions at the source.
In agriculture, CAQM has created Parali Protection Forces for district-level oversight, satellite-based burnt area tracking with ISRO, and the legal empowerment of District Magistrates to prosecute violations. Together, these measures have driven a dramatic decline in crop residue fires. Punjab saw incidents fall from 71,304 in 2021 to 10,909 in 2024, while Haryana dropped from 6,829 to 1,315 . To create a sustainable outlet for farm waste, the Commission has also advanced biomass co-firing in coal-based power plants, blending paddy straw with coal to reduce coal consumption and avoid open burning. This began in 2021, when 11 thermal plants within 300 km of Delhi were directed to co-fire 5–10% biomass.
In June 2025, the mandate expanded to brick kilns in non-NCR districts of Punjab and Haryana, with a phased plan to achieve 50% paddy straw-based biomass use by November 2028.
In 2023, CAQM strengthened industrial decarbonisation by mandating strict and immediate compliance with emission limits for particulate matter, sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, mercury, and water use in coal- and lignite-based thermal power plants, in line with standards set and periodically updated by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change. This regulatory push has strengthened compliance across the industrial and power sectors. CAQM has also boosted biomass pellet production, including the once-scarce torrefied type, through access to technology, training, and subsidies provided by the Central Pollution Control Board and state governments.
More read:-
https://fehealthcare.financialexpress.com/blogs/caqms-blueprint-for-breathing-easier-in-indias-most-polluted-regions
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Across seven multi-season surveys, Wildlife Institute of India researchers searched for bird carcasses within a 150-m radius of 90 randomly selected wind turbines and found 124.
In the first half of 2025, India added around 3.5 GW to the wind sector – an 82% year-on-year growth – taking the total installed capacity to 51.3 GW. Even so, India’s wind power remains largely untapped. According to the National Institute of Wind Energy, India’s gross wind power potential is 1163.9 GW at 150 m above ground level.
At the Global Wind Day Conference in June, Union Minister of New and Renewable Energy Pralhad Joshi urged States to address land availability and transmission delays post-haste.
India’s ambitious climate goals and surging energy demands mean renewable energy development will continue to accelerate. Experts are concerned, however, that the addition of wind power capacity has been coming at the expense of avian welfare.
Bird mortality at wind farms
For years, researchers have raised concerns about the impact of wind turbines on fauna, particularly birds. A study by the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), published recently in Nature Scientific Reports, has estimated globally high bird mortality rates at wind farms in the Thar Desert.
The study was conducted in a 3,000 sq. km desert landscape in Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, home to around 900 wind turbines and 272 bird species, including the critically endangered great Indian bustard. Across seven multi-season surveys, WII researchers searched for bird carcasses within a 150-m radius of 90 randomly selected wind turbines and found 124.
The estimated annual bird mortality per 1,000 sq. km came up to 4,464 birds after correcting for non-detection due to vegetation cover or carcass degradation during the survey and due to carcass scavenging before the survey.
The researchers conducted similar surveys at 28 randomly selected control sites (between 500 and 2,000 m of any turbine) to account for the natural mortality of birds and found no carcasses.
“Very few studies have robust data to have accurate assessments that correct for detection issues and have controls for comparison,” Yadvendradev Jhala, one of the authors of the study, said.
The WII study isn’t the first to examine bird mortality in wind farms in India. A 2019 study documented bird deaths at wind farms in Kutch and Davangere. However, the estimate of 0.47 bird deaths per turbine per year at both sites now pale in comparison to the 1.24 bird deaths per turbine per month in the Thar Desert.
“It’s quite a high estimate, but that’s quite possible,” Ramesh Kumar Selvaraj, an independent consultant and author of the 2019 paper, said. “[Mortality rate] will vary depending on geography, season, and other factors.”
Bird density, infrastructure density, and configuration are crucial factors, according to Jhala. The Thar Desert is part of the Central Asian Flyway — a major migration route for birds across Eurasia — and a prominent wintering destination.
The desert mortality estimates also included bird collisions with power lines linked to the wind turbines. The Gujarat and Karnataka study didn’t include this cause.
Per both studies, raptors were the most affected group of birds, echoing findings worldwide. “Raptors are long-lived species that lay fewer eggs, and any additional mortality can lead to population-level impacts,” Selvaraj said. “Their flight altitude and soaring flight behaviour means they are more vulnerable while manoeuvring rotating wind turbines.”
Organisations like Birdlife International have proposed several mitigation measures to reduce bird collisions with wind turbines, including painting one of the turbine blades to increase visibility and shutting turbines down at a certain time of day or season. However, Selvaraj said he believes the most crucial step in mitigation is to carefully select the site of a wind farm.
Avian Sensitivity Tool for Energy Planning (AVISTEP) is an open-source platform developed by Birdlife International that helps developers identify and avoid sites where renewable energy could affect birds. Selvaraj, previously with the Bombay Natural History Society, coordinated India’s map for AVISTEP.
“The whole of India, including offshore areas, have been divided into different categories of avian sensitivity such as ‘low’, ‘moderate’, ‘high’, and ‘very high’,” Selvaraj said. “While AVISTEP can serve as a guide, ground-level studies are crucial before installing wind farms,” he added.
However, onshore wind energy projects in India aren’t mandated to conduct an environmental impact assessment (EIA) before installation.
From land to ocean
Offshore wind farms are emerging as a valuable renewable energy resource worldwide. According to the Global Wind Energy Council, operational offshore wind capacity worldwide is currently around 83 GW.
India has also turned its attention offshore and aims to install 30 GW of offshore wind capacity by 2030. In June, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy launched offshore wind energy bids totalling 4 GW in Gujarat and Tamil Nadu.
The primary motivation is to look beyond land-based resources, which are becoming increasingly “complex” and “time-consuming” to procure for renewable project development, Disha Agarwal, senior programme lead, Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW), New Delhi, said.
With a coastline stretching across 7,600 km and exclusive economic zones covering 2.3 million sq. km, India has considerable offshore wind energy potential.
According to CEEW research, the addition of offshore wind to the renewable energy pool in Gujarat will benefit power system operations in the State. “We saw that offshore wind will aid in system adequacy and help meet reliability requirements during peak load hours,” Agarwal said
However, despite the growing interest, there has been limited research on the environmental consequences of offshore wind farms.
Offshore wind energy is a complex infrastructure asset that requires detailed marine spatial planning exercises to assess environmental and social impacts, according to Gopal K. Sarangi, head of the Department of Policy and Management Studies at the TERI School of Advanced Studies, New Delhi.
“As observed in other countries, there are numerous environmental risks for offshore wind farms,” Sarangi said. “They could disturb marine biodiversity, create noise pollution for marine habitats, and pollute the ocean water at various stages of project development.”
According to the National Offshore Wind Energy Policy, unlike other renewable energy developments in the country, EIAs are essential for offshore wind energy.
The rapid EIA report of the proposed offshore wind farm in the Gulf of Khambhat in Gujarat documented five marine mammals, including dolphins and sharks, and a reptile within the study area. While the report recognised that increased turbidity and noise levels during the construction phase of the wind farm may drive away highly sensitive species, it deemed the noise and vibrations during the operation phase to be “limited”.
Selvaraj said he doesn’t agree with the report’s inference that there are very few bird species passing through the study region. “Gujarat and its coasts are a key area within the Central Asian Flyway and the African-Eurasian Flyway,” according to him.
Per AVISTEP as well, the proposed location has a high avian sensitivity score. Thus, Selvaraj urged a longer, more thorough study to understand how migratory bird species use the area and the possible effects of wind farms on these birds.
Nikhil Sreekandan is an independent journalist.
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Given India’s net zero emission goal for 2070, courses blending economics, environment, and policy are set to see a high demand.
With extreme weather conditions, more people now want to know and study its cause and solutions. (Representational Image: Anant National university Official Website)
NEW DELHI: “Many years ago, working on sustainability and climate-related mandates was more ‘nice’ than necessary. But now it has become mandatory. With extreme weather conditions, more people now want to know and study its cause and solutions,” said Miniya Chatterji, founding director of Anant School of Climate Action, a part of the private Anant National University.
The trend started with Stanford University in the United States which, in 2022, launched a new climate school. Columbia University’s climate school joined in and started degree courses in the field. In India, too, many have taken the plunge in the last few years. Though these schools have added new bachelor’s courses in climate change according to the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 mandates, there are challenges in demand and supply overall.
Tanu Jindal, group additional pro vice-chancellor (research and development), director of Amity University, pointed out that since last year, the university had witnessed a 20% increase in enrollments in its masters in environment science and engineering courses. “Due to this rise, we launched an MSc in climate change and green technology and a BSc in environmental science last year,” she said. “Earlier students were not keen on taking environmental science courses immediately after their 12th. But now many want to take up jobs in this area.”
TERI School of Advanced Studies (SAS), New Delhi, has also introduced courses on environmental science and resource management (ESRM), climate science and policy across all its courses along with a bachelor’s in environmental studies.
Why climate change courses are key
Chatterji explained that the big reason for the rise in climate education is the massive job boom since 2022 due to which they started the school. “While timelines in attaining net zero carbon emission are decided for every country, there is nobody to implement it. That’s what makes it extremely relevant today,” she said.
Jindal said that more students are choosing climate technology now because we need a sustainable world and these courses will directly take you to industry-ready jobs. “Once students get to know about green technologies and once we have such technologies and skilled people in this area, issues related to climate change will automatically have a solution,” she stated.
Ashish Garg, head of department, Sustainability Energy Engineering at IIT Kanpur, said rising energy demands are the main cause of issues related to global warming. “Because of climate change, the whole world is facing the challenge of sustainability and increase in energy demand is the driver behind it. It’s all interrelated. However, we need to prepare people and human resources who understand this problem, can develop solutions and work for industries as well as other sectors in energy, climate change, climate modelling, sustainability, environmental social governance (ESG) governance, and other facets of sustainability,” he said.
Climate change education: Curriculum
Chatterji said that Anant’s BTech in climate change has been pegged to the advancements in technology of the world along with multidisciplinarity.
“The course covers climate finance that teaches you how to fund these technologies. It has 54 hours of applied research with students working in actual industry live projects from all the companies working with Sustain labs. The course has eight streams in the first six semesters, including climate simulation, engineering, mathematics and climate engineering, climate chemistry, energy and technology, climate finance, design thinking and behavioural science and technology and society,” she said. Further, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US is a partner of the Climate School at Anant and provides support in specialisations technology and innovation and climate and policy.
In TERI SAS, the new addition to its already-available climate and development-focused courses are aspects of sustainable development which are more practice-based.
“The courses are very interdisciplinary with components on management, economics and climate along with a dedicated community programme where students have to go to rural communities and get involved in various aspects like ESG, development economics and others,” said Swarup Dutta, assistant professor and programme coordinator, MA in Sustainable Development Practice, department of policy and management studies, TERI School of Advanced Studies.
Jindal said that in its master’s courses in green technologies, a basic understanding of science is required due to its technical nature. But a student doesn’t need to have a master’s in environmental sciences only. “We have kept it open for any discipline in sciences,” she said.
She said because climate change is an important subject, the University Grant Commission (UGC) has given four credit courses to each field. At Amity, the courses include training about the toxicants in the environment, water testing, air pollution monitoring techniques, soil testing techniques, health safety measures, how to patent natural pesticides, water testing kits, degrading the toxic substance matter faster in natural conditions and many others.
Industry placements
At Anant, back in 2022, the internship stipends were around Rs 17 lakh per annum for a student. “The trend has continued and the paying capacity of this sector is very high as compared to other branches,” said Chatterji. She also said that in the last three years, they have seen 100% internship placements every year. “Students from BTech in climate change courses have an edge over others. Companies that have placed students include TechMahindra, Bharti Airtel, Jindals, Hitachi, IIT Mandi, different departments of United Nations in Africa and others,” she added.
Jindal stated that generally after a bachelor’s at Amity, students go for a master’s in climate and technology and after which the package varies from Rs 35,000- Rs 70,000 a month. Placement companies include grassroots organisations like the Centre for Science and Environment as well as ministry of earth sciences, ministry of environment forest, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and India Meteorological Department (IMD). Many students have opened their biodiversity non-profits as well, she added.
Challenges
Garg stated that since India has a net zero emission goal of 2070, programmes related to energy, economics and policy will see a high demand because of rising job opportunities. However, there are challenges.
Chatterji pointed out that online courses providing “cookie cutter” programmes are causing inertia in India’s climate action space. “We have to be careful with the kind of education that’s been rolled out and be wary of quality control and standardisation,” she said.
Anant is working closely with the All India Council of Technical Education (AICTE), the premier government body for technical education, on a policy for this. “We worked
with AICTE to create that nomenclature of BTech (Climate Technology) which took years and is now part of the AICTE handbook.”
Dutta noted that environmental studies students are getting jobs in big consulting companies with Rs 13- Rs 16 lakh per annum salaries that rival those of MBA-holders but they possess little practical training. “Organisations are closely working on climate change issues, but not in mitigation. Most courses talk about scientific aspects but are removing the social science and community aspects. Hence, the demand is huge, but quality supply limited,” he stated.
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