Transforming India's Built Environment: A 2050 Vision for Wellness and Resilience (2024)

Publication Type

Miscellaneous

Authors

Singh, Reshma, Monto Mani, Swapnil Joshi

Abstract

This whitepaper attempts to summarize and provide a structured perspective on transforming India’s built environment, taking stock of emerging realities attributed to climate change and sustainability (planet, people, and prosperity). While the COVID-19 pandemic provided the original backdrop to review the status of the built environment and its resilience, climate change continues to manifest as an existential threat.

While the COVID-19 pandemic provided the original backdrop to review the status of the built environment and its resilience, climate change continues to manifest as an existential threat. We attempt to summarize and provide a structured perspective on transforming India’s built environment, taking stock of emerging realities attributed to climate change and sustainability (planet, people, and prosperity).

Three interdependent, concurrent drivers, Decarbonize, Democratize, and Digitalize are essential for the required transformations in the built environment. Decarbonization aims to drop the exponentially accruing carbon footprint attributed to modern society to fundamentally restore and reset planetary systems that society is attuned to.Democratization aims to overcome deprivation and marginalization, to be inclusive of diversity in culture, geography, and aspirations in providing a healthy and resilient living environment. Digitalization could provide the ubiquitous digital connectivity and Internet of Things as the unifying fabric encompassing environmental stewardship to network, facilitate, operate, and underscore transformations across all seven sectors in the built environment, viz., residential, agriculture, administration, industry & commerce, education & research, infrastructure services, and transport and communication.

Decarbonize, Democratize and Digitalize, like in a triple helix, are intricately linked, and may be achieved through five actionable levers: Research and Development, Technology, Human Capital, Policy and Economic Investment. This structure aims to support wellness and resilience in the built environment and restore planetary stability.

Wellness provides the much-needed paradigm to unify the outcomes emerging from the seven built-environment sectors. Clarity needs to emerge on the definition and assessment of wellness and sustainability, as it would apply to various activities and stakeholders, to achieve carbon neutrality. There is an imminent need for restoring ecosystem services and enhancing biodiversity. Wellness as a fundamental right permeates all aspects of the built and natural environment and the planet. The built environment (urban to be specific) also needs to be reconfigured keeping in mind human scale and socio-temporal sensitivity, e.g. open spaces, pedestrian mobility, social inclusiveness, nature and recreation. In addition to equitable and affordable access to a healthy living environment, meeting inter-generational aspirations is crucial.

This white paper has taken stock of current status and challenges in the built environment while also identifying multi-sectoral recommendations at the building, community and regional/national scales. Each of the three drivers has been articulated in detail, highlighting challenges and opportunities in terms of market barriers, policy and institutional challenges, and societal saliency.

Decarbonization approaches include reduction in embodied and operational carbon and circularity
of materials, products and spaces. Democratization approaches include provision of inclusive, healthier built environments and communities, resilience to unprecedented health and climate risks, and reinforcing positive sustainable behavior.Digitalization approaches include all stages of building lifecycle, community-scale systems, and unlocking region-specific transformations. This involves a national computing and networking infrastructure, archiving and revival of traditional knowledge, and adoption of machine learning and artificial intelligence based analytics for the built environment.

At the UN Climate Change Conference 2021, India announced a target of net zero emissions by 2070. India will reduce its projected Carbon emissions by 1 billion tonnes and the carbonintensity of its economy by 45% by 2030. In order to approach, and as we believe, surpass this target, it is absolutely critical to transform the built environment that constitutes nearly 40% of global energy-related GHG emissions. While other energy sectors such as centralized renewables may require significant infrastructure change and investment, building technologies can create quick climate wins. In India where half of the buildings and homes that will be standing in 2050 have yet to be built, but once built will last 50-100years, this is a historic opportunity. It is also a contrast to decarbonizing sectors such as transport where the assets are short lived. The built environment thereby lends itself to democratization and faster adoption as one of the most cost effective and deep carbon abatement wedges while being the human theater for wellness and health.

Ten key considerations have been identified along the three drivers with a vision of a zero-carbon built environment promoting digitally-enabled equitable wellness and resilience for all.

Year of Publication

2021

Organization

Whole Building Systems Department, Building Technology and Urban Systems Division, International Energy Analysis Department

Research Areas

BTUS Urban Science, International Energy Analysis, International Energy Studies

Related Files

Transforming India's Built Environment: A 2050 Vision for Wellness and Resilience (2024)

FAQs

What is the vision 2050 for climate change? ›

A net-zero world is within reach. But it will be a far different place—one where companies have recreated their businesses, people have adapted their lifestyles, and governments have taken measures to protect natural resources.

What is India doing to improve the environment? ›

India's environmental policy centers on protecting regional glaciers, reducing plastic use, producing clean cooking fuel and making the railway system more sustainable. Significant progress has also been made in expanding renewable energy capacity.

What are the environmental goals for 2050? ›

To keep 1.5°C within reach, the United States has a goal of achieving net-zero emissions economy-wide by no later than 2050 [3] [4] [5]. The Paris Agreement establishes a framework to rapidly increase global ambition to hold warming well below 2°C while pursuing efforts to limit warming to 1.5°C.

What is the built environment in India? ›

Addressing the Built Environment in India

The smallest unit of the built environment is the building, which links up to other buildings and urban services – such as transport, water supply and treatment, etc. Before zooming out to a city level, groups of buildings form communities and neighbourhoods.

Where is the safest place to live in 2050? ›

In examining a progressively worsening climate, Scenario 8.5, the safest counties in 2050 become:
  1. McKinley County, New Mexico.
  2. Conejos County, Colorado.
  3. Summit County, Colorado.
  4. Duchesne County, Utah.
  5. Saguache County, Colorado.
  6. Spokane County, Washington.
  7. Emery County, Utah.
  8. Eagle County, Colorado.
Mar 23, 2023

What will happen by 2050 with climate change? ›

It predicts that by 2050, the climate crisis could cause an additional 14.5 million deaths, $12.5 trillion in economic losses and $1.1 trillion in extra costs to healthcare systems around the globe.

What are the 4 steps taken by India to improve the environment? ›

The Indian government is participating in global efforts through a number of programmes: 1. India's National Auto-fuel policy mandates cleaner fuels for vehicles. 2. The Energy Conservation Act 2001 outlines initiatives to improve energy efficiency.

How do people in India change the environment? ›

Greenhouse gas emissions by India are the third largest in the world and the main source is coal. India emitted 2.8 Gt of CO2eq in 2016 (2.5 including LULUCF). 79% were CO 2, 14% methane and 5% nitrous oxide.

What is India doing to adapt to climate change? ›

India's domestic policy on climate and environmental action includes protecting regional glaciers , greening the railway system , reducing single-use plastic and producing clean cooking fuel . India aims to reach net zero by 2070 and has been able to decouple its economic growth from its emissions .

What are the goals for biodiversity in 2050? ›

The proposed Goals for 2050 portray 4 areas of outcomes to benefit biodiversity and human wellbeing, broadly envisaged as: maintaining and enhancing a healthy nature, safeguarding nature's contributions to people, ensuring fair and equitable sharing of benefits from the utilization of genetic resources, and availing ...

What is achieving climate neutrality by 2050? ›

The EU Climate Law legally binds EU countries as a whole to become climate neutral by 2050. Achieving this goal requires transforming the way we produce, consume, travel, and eat. EU institutions have already put in place many measures to guide and support governments, businesses, and citizens in this transition.

What are 3 goals of the environmental movement? ›

Despite the diversity of the environmental movement, four pillars provided a unifying theme to the broad goals of political ecology: protection of the environment, grassroots democracy, social justice, and nonviolence.

What is the vision of India 2050? ›

The vision 2050 mainly emphasises on the following points: • Scientific assessment, evaluation and management of the Himalayan aquatic resources. Domestication, mass seed production and technology transfer for production enhancement of highly preferred coldwater fish species.

What is India doing for environment? ›

India has taken the oath to cut down its emissions to carbon neutral by 2070. The National Clean Air Programme was launched in the year 2019 by The Union Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change to reduce the quantity of Particulate matters in the range of PM2.

What is India's environmental problem? ›

Air Pollution: India's rapid industrialization and urbanization have led to a significant increase in air pollution levels. Burning fossil fuels, industrial emissions, and vehicular exhaust contribute to high concentrations of particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide.

What is the vision of the world in 2050? ›

Time to Transform. The world faces three critical challenges: the climate emergency, nature loss and mounting inequality. As global risks continue to build, business leaders are rallying behind a bold and urgent transformation agenda developed by WBCSD.

What is the climate ambition 2050? ›

Striving to become the world's first climate-neutral continent by 2050. The EU aims to be climate-neutral by 2050 – an economy with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions.

What will the world be like in 2050? ›

This is an invitation to engage in shaping a better world for generations to come. Technological Integration: By 2050, technology will likely be seamlessly integrated into everyday life. Augmented reality, virtual reality, and artificial intelligence will be commonplace, transforming how we work, learn, and interact.

What are the future goals for climate change? ›

Reducing U.S. greenhouse gas emissions 50-52% below 2005 levels in 2030. Reaching 100% carbon pollution-free electricity by 2035. Achieving a net-zero emissions economy by 2050.

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