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India's Climate Finance Taxonomy: A Guide
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India's Climate Finance Taxonomy: A Guide


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Promoting sustainability and transparency in investment decisions

India's Climate Finance Taxonomy: A Guide

  • 18 Oct, 2025
  • 225

India’s Climate Finance Taxonomy

What is it?

India will soon release a climate finance taxonomy to define which projects and sectors qualify as climate finance. It will identify investments that:

  • Support mitigation (reduce emissions)
  • Promote adaptation (increase climate resilience)
  • Enable decarbonisation of hard-to-abate sectors

This taxonomy aligns with the Paris Agreement and India’s Net Zero 2070 goal.

Why is it being done?

  • Mobilise capital for clean, green, and resilient projects
  • Ensure transparency and prevent greenwashing
  • Support Viksit Bharat 2047 by guiding investments into sustainable infrastructure
  • Attract global and domestic climate finance

Examples of Eligible Projects

  • A wind energy project in Gujarat recognised as climate-finance-eligible
  • A coastal embankment project protecting villages from rising sea levels (adaptation finance)

How will it work?

  • Two-stage rollout:
    1. Foundational taxonomy: basic definitions and classifications
    2. Sector-specific annexures: detailed technical guidelines
  • Hybrid classification:
    • Recognises projects serving both mitigation and adaptation goals
    • Encourages co-benefit projects

Hybrid Example

Urban rainwater harvesting systems in a smart city: mitigates water stress (adaptation) and reduces pumping-related emissions (mitigation).

Eligible Activities

  • Green hydrogen in steel plants
  • Solar cold storage for farmers
  • Micro-irrigation for drought-prone regions

Which Projects Won’t Qualify?

The taxonomy will exclude activities that:

  • Continue to rely on fossil fuels without emission controls
  • Have minimal climate benefit or cause environmental harm
  • Are cosmetic changes labelled as “green” without measurable impact

Examples of Non-Eligible Activities

  • Expanding thermal power plants without carbon capture
  • Diesel-based generators for rural power
  • Planting water-intensive trees in dry regions
  • Marketing campaigns with no actual emissions reduction
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