Economy
PTI
Mar 08, 2022, 12:04 PM | Updated 12:04 PM IST
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Dubai, United Arab Emirates (NewsVoir) Shri Piyush Goyal, Minister of Commerce & Industry, Consumer Affairs & Food & Public Distribution and Textiles, Govt. of India and Leader of the House in Rajya Sabha today said that India is moving towards becoming the fastest growing green economy of the world.
Addressing the seminar, ‘Only One Earth - a discussion on Environment’ at the India Pavilion, EXPO2020 Dubai virtually, Shri Goyal said, “While we are proud to be the fastest-growing economy in the world we hope to become the fastest-growing green economy across the planet.”
The session, organized in collaboration with Bhamla Foundation, aimed at raising awareness and the need to safeguard the environment, in line with the annual global theme laid out by the United Nations Environment Programme, ‘Only One Earth’ for the World Environment Day 2022.
Goyal further said, “I am grateful to the leadership of United Arab Emirates for giving the India Pavilion a place of pride at the World EXPO2020 Dubai. The Pavilion is a perfect example of bringing sustainability into action. It has been constructed on principles of water and energy conservation and we are focusing on recycling in a big way and hosting a wide range of discussions around biodiversity, wildlife conservation, climate action and renewable energy.”
“As a signatory to the Paris Agreement, the Modi government has walked the talk on green energy. Our installed non-fossil energy capacity is the 4th largest in the world and has grown by 300%. One of our notable initiatives was a conversion from the incandescent light bulb to LED light where we are probably the world’s largest in terms of the rollout of LED. That has saved the country 6-7 billion dollars of our consumers and saved 80 million tonnes of carbon emission and contributed to making the world a safer place to live in,” he added.
Goyal further stated, “As a leading agri-producer, we are taking significant efforts to promote the biofuels. Now, food grains waste and sugarcane are converted into ethanol in a big way, with the ethanol blending programme making rapid strides. It used to be 1% then this year between 9-10% and next 2 years we hope to take the blending to 20%, to reduce our dependence on import of crude oil and make our petrol vehicle more sustainable and support efforts towards net-zero by 2070.”
(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.)