Public engagement
Opinions
Who Owns Tomorrow’s Emissions?
Aman Srivastava and Nikita Shukla
The Wire | 24 October 2025
Climate finance discussions should recognise future emissions are attributable to developed countries.
Labour, Nature and Capitalism: Exploring Labour-Environmental Conflicts in Kerala, India by Silpa Satheesh (2025): A Review
Sony R K
Doing Sociology | 22 September 2025
Silpa Satheesh’s book, ‘Labour, Nature, and Capitalism: Exploring Labour – Environmental Conflicts in Kerala, India’ makes a significant contribution to understanding how environmental conflicts unfold in contexts marked by economic precarity and institutional complicity. It offers a nuanced perspective from the Global South on how material interests, ideological alignments, institutional power, and contested understandings of nature shape ecological struggles.
Visualising the Heat Crisis: A Guide for Nonprofits
Sonali Verma
India Development Review | 31 July 2025
To respond effectively to extreme heat, we need to stop depicting it as an abstract or invisible threat. Here are tools for practitioners and communicators to visually convey its true scale and interconnected impacts.
In the news
The NDC death loop (Part 2): Demands for ambition, disappointment and relevance in a fractured world
Down to Earth | 9 October 2025
Navroz K Dubash spoke to Down to Earth on how climate governance can be reinvented, especially for the Global South.
Green goals versus growth needs: India’s climate scorecard
France24 | 7 November 2025
“India must soon present a roadmap to its climate commitments, with goals to reach by 2035, which would likely be cautious, allowing it to meet and possibly exceed them. There could be a peak-emission year around 2040-45, allowing a ramp-down of its emissions over the subsequent 30 years or so towards its 2070 net-zero target. It would also be useful for India to shift from setting renewable energy capacity targets to speaking about actual generation coming from non-fossil sources” – Aman Srivastava was quoted in France24.
‘Huge energy challenges’: how can India make the leap to become a green, clean country?
The Guardian | 29 September 2025
“So far India’s approach to its energy transition goals has mostly been ad hoc and supply-centric rather than targeted to end users, because it comes from a scarcity mindset. This has worked out so far, but India has reached a stage where we need a much more strategic whole systems approach to energy transition” – Ashwini K Swain was quoted in The Guardian.
Trouble in the Air: How Pollution is Bleeding India’s Health & Economy
Outlook Business | 26 June 2025
“Most actions under NCAP have been targeted at dust management with measures such as road sweeping and water sprinkling. It’s not nearly enough to address the true burden of air pollution,” Bhargav Krishna was quoted in Outlook Business.
Speaking engagements
Bhargav Krishna spoke about feasible and affordable solutions to combat air pollution through the building and construction sector in the panel, ‘Breathe It or Beat It: Tackling Toxic Air’ at the 17th GRIHA Summit, from November 3-4, 2025. The Summit was organised by GRIHA Council and supported by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) and TERI.
“Adaptation cannot be assumed to be inherently just; it must be intentionally designed to address existing inequities. This requires integrating gender and human rights mandates into national and state climate frameworks, ensuring inclusive governance that empowers women, youth, and marginalised communities in decision-making processes, and investing in gender-disaggregated data, capacity building, and locally led solutions. Embedding these approaches across all levels of governance is essential to making climate adaptation equitable, sustainable, and transformative” – Sony R K spoke at the multi-stakeholder consultation on ‘India’s Pathways to COP30: Advancing Climate Resilience, Equity & Sustainable Development’ organised by Sphere India with ICARS, IIT Roorkee on 24 October 2025.
Rashi Agarwal spoke in the panel ‘Pathways to Careers in Climate & Sustainability’ organised by The Hertie School and Hansraj College, Delhi University, on 29 October 2025. The conversation revolved around the panellists’ personal journeys into the sector, exploring the value of graduate education, discussing the skills and qualifications required, and navigating the evolving sustainability sector.
SFC hosted Shahana Chattaraj, Director of Research at the WRI Centre for Governance and Equity, on 16 October 2025, during which she presented the findings from an exploratory study, titled, ‘Migration and Resilience in a Changing Climate: How migration supports household resilience in climate vulnerable areas in India’, examining migration experiences and resilience outcomes across climate-vulnerable districts and destination cities in 3 Indian states – Gujarat, Odisha, and Kerala. It draws on a ‘climate mobilities’ framework that challenges popular narratives of mass climate-induced cross-border migrations, and seeks to go beyond vulnerability and disaster-risk reduction frameworks to better understand how a changing climate affects migration capabilities, patterns and outcomes in different contexts.
Rashi Agarwal attended the JETNET Annual Conference 2025 organised by the Just Transition Research Centre at IIT Kanpur, in Goa on 7-8 October, where she presented a case study titled, ‘Institutional Governance in Advancing Just Energy Transition: Case of Jharkhand’s Task Force – Sustainable Just Transition’. Developed jointly with Sarada Prasanna Das and Ashwini K Swain from SFC, with inputs from Anjali Patel, this case study assessed the Task Force to reiterate the importance of subnational institutions and governance for a just energy transition in India. Drawing insights from the Task Force for other coal-dependent states undergoing an energy transition, it recommends integrating transition strategies with state climate plans, strengthening institutional capacities and building implementable frameworks for subnational preparedness for energy transition.
“Mapping fiscal and financial instruments across different technology stages is crucial. Policies can’t just be reactive, they need to be sequenced and stable over time to sustain investment and innovation. For sectors like green steel, this sequencing should work in tandem with strong R&D investment, which has no substitute. In India, where industrial decarbonisation will depend on both cost competitiveness and domestic innovation, consistent public support — as seen in China — could be transformative” – Nikita Shukla spoke in the India Green Steel Network (IGSN) Sustainable Finance & Green Industrial Policy Working Group Roundtable, organised by Climate Catalyst, on 9 October 2025.