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Article
18 Mar 2026
Context
- The Union Budget 2026 has sparked significant debate following the announcement of a ₹20,000 crore allocation for a carbon credit programme and this has led to widespread confusion regarding its intended purpose.
- A key question has emerged: Is the allocation meant to support industrial carbon capture technologies, or is it designed to create a new income stream for farmers through carbon credits?
- While official documents indicate a clear industrial focus, an alternative narrative has gained traction, highlighting both a communication gap and a broader policy opportunity.
The Official Framework: Focus on Industrial Decarbonisation
- CCUS for Hard-to-Abate Sectors
- The foundation of the Budget announcement lies in the R&D Roadmap for Carbon Capture, Utilisation, and Storage (CCUS), released by the Department of Science and Technology (DST) in December 2025.
- This document clearly identifies its target sectors: power, steel, cement, refineries, and chemicals.
- These industries are categorised as hard-to-abate because their emissions are concentrated and difficult to eliminate through renewable energy alone.
- The ₹20,000 crore allocation is intended to support large-scale deployment of CCUS technologies.
- These technologies capture carbon dioxide emissions directly from industrial sources and either repurpose or store them underground, thereby reducing overall emissions.
- Exclusion of Agriculture from CCUS
- A crucial aspect of the roadmap is the explicit exclusion of agriculture from CCUS strategies.
- Although agriculture contributes to greenhouse gas emissions, primarily methane and nitrous oxide, it does so in a diffuse and biologically driven manner.
- This makes it unsuitable for point-source carbon capture technologies.
- Instead, agriculture is associated with Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) strategies, such as soil carbon sequestration, agroforestry, and biochar.
- These approaches focus on removing existing carbon from the atmosphere rather than capturing emissions at their source.
The Counter-Narrative: Farmers as Beneficiaries
- Emergence of the Farmer Carbon Credit Idea
- Despite the clear industrial intent, a competing narrative has emerged in media and public discourse.
- This perspective suggests that the Budget allocation will enable farmers to earn carbon credits by adopting sustainable agricultural practices.
- The idea of turning farms into climate solutions has gained popularity due to increasing awareness of environmental sustainability and rural income diversification.
- Link to Voluntary Carbon Markets
- This narrative draws support from the growing voluntary carbon market, where agriculture and forestry projects are already generating carbon credits.
- Several private and state-level initiatives are experimenting with models that reward farmers for improving soil health and increasing carbon sequestration.
- However, these developments are separate from the government-funded CCUS initiative, leading to a conflation of two distinct concepts.
Root Cause of the Confusion: Policy Language and Misinterpretation
- The confusion largely stems from the use of the broad term carbon credit programme in the Budget.
- While technically accurate in a general sense, this phrasing lacks specificity and has blurred the distinction between industrial carbon capture and agricultural carbon sequestration.
- The DST roadmap provides a precise and sector-specific framework, but the Budget’s language has created expectations of a more inclusive scheme, particularly among stakeholders in the agricultural sector.
Policy Implications and Opportunities
- Need for Clear Communication
- The government must address this ambiguity by clearly communicating the objectives and scope of the CCUS programme.
- Ensuring that stakeholders understand the industrial focus of the allocation is essential to avoid unrealistic expectations.
- Potential for Agricultural Carbon Markets
- At the same time, the debate highlights a significant opportunity. India’s vast agricultural landscape offers immense potential for carbon sequestration.
- A dedicated policy framework for agricultural carbon credits could provide farmers with an additional income stream while contributing to climate goals.
- However, such a programme would require separate funding, institutional mechanisms, and regulatory structures, distinct from the technology-intensive CCUS initiative.
The Way Forward: Towards a Multi-Sectoral Climate Strategy
- The current situation underscores the need for a comprehensive approach to climate policy.
- Industrial decarbonisation through CCUS is essential, given that heavy industries contribute significantly to India’s emissions.
- Simultaneously, agriculture can play a vital role in carbon removal and sustainability.
- Balancing these two fronts, industrial emissions reduction and agricultural carbon sequestration, will be key to achieving long-term climate objectives.
Conclusion
- The controversy surrounding the Union Budget 2026 reflects both a misunderstanding and an opportunity.
- While the ₹20,000 crore allocation is clearly aimed at industrial decarbonisation through CCUS, the parallel narrative around farmers reveals a growing interest in agricultural carbon markets.
- To move forward effectively, the government must clearly distinguish between these two domains while advancing both with equal commitment.
- By doing so, India can develop a holistic, multi-sectoral strategy that addresses emissions from industry while unlocking the environmental and economic potential of its agricultural sector.
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18 Mar 2026
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Current Affairs
March 17, 2026
About Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome (HGPS):
- Progeria, also known as HGPS, is an extremely rare genetic disease that causes rapid aging in children.
- Progeria is extremely rare.
- What Causes Progeria?
- A genetic mutation in the LMNA gene causes progeria. The LMNA gene is responsible for making a protein called lamin A.
- Lamin A is an important part of the structural scaffolding that holds the nucleus of each cell in your body together.
- A tiny mutation in the LMNA gene causes it to create an irregular form of the lamin A protein called progerin.
- Progerin takes the place of the lamin A and makes the nuclei of your cells unstable, slowly damaging them.
- This leads to the early death of every cell in your body, which causes the process of premature aging.
- Almost all cases of progeria occur as a new, spontaneous mutation in the LMNA gene. This means there’s no biological family history of the disease.
- Newborns with the disorder appear to be healthy at birth but usually start to show signs of premature aging during their first one to two years of life.
- Their growth rate slows and they don’t gain weight as expected.
- This condition does not affect intellectual development or the development of motor skills such as sitting, standing, and walking.
- However, their rapid aging causes distinct physical characteristics, including:
- Hair loss (baldness).
- Prominent eyes.
- Aged, wrinkled skin.
- A thin, beaked nose.
- Disproportionately small face compared to head size.
- Loss of fat under the skin.
- Progeria is always fatal. The average age of death is 14.5 years, although some adults with progeria will live into their early 20s.
- Death most often occurs as a result of complications of severe atherosclerosis.
- Atherosclerosis occurs when plaque builds up within the walls of your arteries. This makes them less elastic and, therefore, stiffer.
- This condition greatly increases the chances of having a heart attack or stroke at a young age.