India needs more climate finance after COP29 | Law.asia

  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ
Register Login Subscribe
Resources
Awards galleryA-List lawyersLaw firm directory
Sections
News & dealsBusiness law digestDispute digestLegal Q&AFeaturesOpinionCorrespondentsExpert briefing
Topics
Data privacyArtificial intelligenceDispute resolution
Law.asia home
Archive
.TV
Awards
CBLJ Forum•Shanghai 2025
Events
Jobs
About us
Contact us
Follow Law.asia

India Business Law Journal
India Business Law Journal

    • SECTIONS

      • News
      • Business law digest
      • Dispute digest
      • Legal Q&A
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Correspondents
      • Expert briefing

      ABOUT US

      • Editorial board
      • Publisher & credits

      TOPICS

      • Data privacy
      • Artificial intelligence
      • Dispute resolution

      RESOURCES

      • Awards gallery
      • A-List lawyers
      • Law firm directory

      E-READER EDITION

      ARCHIVE
India Business Law Journal India Business Law Journal
  • Sections
    • News & deals
    • Business law digest
    • Dispute digest
    • Legal Q&A
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Correspondents
    • Expert briefing
  • Topics
    • Data privacy
    • Artificial intelligence
    • Dispute resolution
  • Videos
  • Awards
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe
  • Events
  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ
  • icon
    • Login
    • Register
  • Law Asia
  • ABLJ
  • CBLJ
  • IBLJ

India Business Law Journal
  • Sections
    • News & deals
    • Business law digest
    • Dispute digest
    • Legal Q&A
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Correspondents
    • Expert briefing
  • Topics
    • Data privacy
    • Artificial intelligence
    • Dispute resolution
  • Videos
  • Awards
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe
  • Events
  • icon
    • Login
    • Register
Home DSK Legal COP29: India’s climate finance landscape – present and future
  • DSK Legal
  • IBLJ Correspondents

COP29: India’s climate finance landscape – present and future

By Ashish Chandra, Saurabh Tiwari and Anupal Dasgupta ,DSK Legal
17 January 2025
0
137

COP29 brought together nearly 200 nations to tackle the climate crisis, with a focus on increasing climate funding for developing countries. The conference agreed to triple the annual amount for green technologies to USD300 billion by 2035 and bring in USD1.3 trillion annually through co-ordinated public and private investments.

India called the USD300 billion target inadequate, failing to meet the financial and technological needs of developing nations. This stemmed from historical inequities in emissions, with the Global North’s industrialisation responsible for 92% of excess carbon emissions. Despite facing severe climate degradation, developing countries have not secured sufficient financial support from wealthier nations. Calls for greater accountability have grown louder as developing nations demand fairer contributions from the North.

Ashish Chandra
Ashish Chandra
Partner
DSK Legal

Despite global challenges, India has achieved a significant milestone in its renewable energy development, surpassing 200 gigawatts (GW) of total renewable energy capacity. This aligns with the country’s goal of achieving 500GW from non-fossil sources by 2030. Renewable energy-based electricity capacity reached 203.18GW in October 2024, up from 178.98GW in October 2023, a 13.5% increase of 24.2GW. Including nuclear energy, India’s total non-fossil fuel capacity rose to 211.36GW in 2024, compared to 186.46GW the previous year.

India faces financial challenges in achieving its climate goals, requiring an estimated USD2.5 trillion by 2030, approximately USD170 billion annually, to meet its Nationally Determined Contributions. Reports suggest the cost of reaching net-zero emissions by 2070 could be USD10.1 trillion, underscoring the scale of transformation for all sectors.

While domestic investments are rising, they are insufficient and global financial inflows lag. The private sector’s role, though growing, is constrained by high borrowing costs, uneven fund disbursement and limited risk-sharing mechanisms. Removing these barriers through policy reforms, inventive financing and substantial international climate finance commitments will be crucial to India meeting its ambitious targets and driving sustainable development.

Saurabh Tiwari
Saurabh Tiwari
Partner
DSK Legal

India and other developing nations continue to emphasise the need for fair and accessible climate finance. Innovative tools such as green bonds, blended finance, and climate-focused investment funds have come to the fore. The focus is on affordability, high borrowing costs and robust mechanisms for distributing funds. This requires significant private sector involvement locally and globally.

The legal industry has a vital and evolving role in India’s renewable energy transition, with significant growth potential in an expanding sector. Lawyers are heavily involved in structuring and negotiating contracts, such as in power purchase, engineering, procurement and construction, and project finance. They ensure compliance with the regulatory requirements of such bodies as the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy and state electricity boards.

Greater investment in the renewable sector and cross-border transactions demand expertise in project finance, international law, foreign exchange, tax structuring and arbitration. Green bonds and innovative financing require securities law and ESG compliance skills. Lawyers shape policies and advise governments on renewable energy laws, tariffs and investment incentives.

With sustainability becoming a key business priority, companies increasingly seek legal guidance to align with renewable goals. The legal industry’s role in resolving disputes, particularly concerning project delays and contract enforcement, will continue to grow.

Progress after COP29 needs strengthened climate finance and allaying the concerns of developing nations. Developed countries have to fulfil their pledges and increase transparency, ensuring that funds are accessible and used effectively. Establishing accountability is crucial to rebuilding trust between the Global North and South, particularly when previous commitments have not been met. Promoting innovative financing tools such as green bonds and blended finance will attract private investment. Global collaboration is key to attracting the agreed USD1.3 trillion annually, allowing developing countries to achieve their climate goals and foster sustainable development.

Ashish Chandra and Saurabh Tiwari are partners and Anupal Dasgupta is a principal associate at DSK Legal. The authors would like to thank principal associate Anupal Dasgupta for his contribution.

DSK Legal
1701, One World Centre
Floor 17, Tower 2B
841, Senapati Bapat Marg
Mumbai – 400 013, India
Contact details:
T: +91 22 6658 8000
E: contactus@dsklegal.com

  • TAGS
  • Anupal Dasgupta
  • Ashish Chandra
  • Blended Finance
  • Climate Finance Challenges
  • Climate Goals Funding
  • COP29 Climate Funding
  • DSK Legal
  • Environmental Social and Governance
  • Global North-South Emission Inequities
  • Green bonds
  • India Renewable Energy Milestone
  • Legal Industry Renewable Transition
  • Net-Zero Emission Costs
  • Renewable Energy Legal Framework
  • Saurabh Tiwari
Previous articleSMEs see ESG clauses as sustainability drivers
Next articleNew criminal laws safeguard MNCs against cybercrime
Jan

Most Recent

Market Pulse

India’s In-house Counsel Awards 2025-26

Nominate now for India’s In-house Counsel Awards 2026

10 November 2025
Habib Al Mulla India consultancy

UAE’s Habib Al Mulla opens consultancy services in New Delhi

5 November 2025
Vanya Singh joins Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas

Former SEBI expert to boost CAM’s dispute resolution practice

4 November 2025

Correspondents

Delhi High Court anti-arbitration injunction Singapore

India to be an outlier in dispute resolution

By Sneha Jaisingh and Rasika Alur, Bharucha & Partners
12 November 2025
Stablecoin dollarisation in India

Digital dollar may come for your currency

By Rishi Anand, Chirag Jain and Drishti Jain, DSK Legal
12 November 2025
Strategic investor definition for REITs and InvITsvideo

Reforms widen REITs and InvITs investor base

By Parag Bhide, Bharucha & Partners
12 November 2025

Features

Delay in India data protection law

Why the wait?

Delayed implementation of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act sees Indian businesses struggle with compliance

28 October 2025

Harvey’s passage to India

AI company's co-founder and CEO Winston Weinberg reveals India's role in his global ambitions

22 October 2025
Proactive legal teams

Amplifying legal’s voice

KPMG’s associate GC, Priya Bahl, shows the way for in-house teams changing to be proactive for better future

16 October 2025
Delayed implementation of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act sees Indian businesses struggle with compliance
AI company's co-founder and CEO Winston Weinberg reveals India's role in his global ambitions
KPMG’s associate GC, Priya Bahal, writes that being proactive is the only way forward for in-house teams

Expert Briefings

Reshaping employment covenants

Reshaping employment bonds and restrictive covenants

By Ravi Singhania, Jivesh Chandrayan and Neha Meena, Singhania & Partners

Courts place a growing emphasis on contractual fairness when enforcing employment agreements

1 October 2025
India-UAE CEPA Trade Agreement

In the fast lane

By Ahmed Ziad Galadari, Manish Narayan and Antara Das, Galadari Advocates & Legal Counsultants

The India-UAE CEPA has set a benchmark for modern trade agreements, yielding benefits in many sectors

6 August 2025
Reverse Flipping India

The great Indian homecoming: Why startups are back

LexStart Partners explain the recent trend of Indian startups shifting their base back home

19 June 2025
Courts place a growing emphasis on contractual fairness when enforcing employment agreements
The India-UAE CEPA has set a benchmark for modern trade agreements, yielding benefits in many sectors

Opinion

Air Passenger Rights India

Flight protections need legal upgrade

Aviation attorney writes that India needs a dedicated law to protect the rights of passengers facing flight disruption

5 September 2025
Aviation attorney writes that India needs a dedicated law to protect the rights of passengers facing flight disruption

Jobs

LAW.ASIA

Asia’s leader in legal intelligence

Law.asia is an award-winning portal providing news, analysis and expert advice on business law in Asia to in-house counsel, lawyers in private practice and other business and legal leaders. It features the proprietary editorial content and archives of our premium legal magazines – Asia Business Law Journal, China Business Law Journal and India Business Law Journal – along with videos, law firm listings, awards and much more. Produced by Law.asia Limited, an independent media company, Law.asia is multilingual, offering content in English, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. Find out more.
Follow Law.asia
Law firms Awards Events Legal jobs • Post a job
About us Archive Archive Archive Archive Subscribe Contact us
Please send any press releases, deal announcements, details of new hires, newsletters and any other news items to: news@law.asia
  • Policy on advertising & sponsorship
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms & conditions of use
  • Privacy Policy
© Copyright 2026 Law.asia Limited. All rights reserved.
Imagined by DOOD Website Design

Follow us on LinkedIn

Follow now