Paper 2: Government policies & interventions for development in various sectors & issues arising out of their design & implementation
No to Hague Treaty
Why in News?
- The government is not yet ready to sign the Hague treaty on the inter-country abduction of children by parents fleeing a bad marriage
- The government has long held the view that the decision could lead to harassment of women escaping marital discord or domestic violence
- There has been immense pressure from the U.S. on the government to sign the treaty
Why India is not ready to sign ?
- A committee constituted by the Centre to examine legal issues involved in international parental abduction submitted its report in April, opposing a central provision of the Hague Convention
- It said that the criterion of habitual residence of the child, which is used to determine whether the child was wrongfully removed by a parent as well as to seek the return of the child to the country of habitual residence, was not in the best interest of the child
- It also recommended setting up of a Child Removal Disputes Resolution Authority to act as a nodal body to decide on the custody of the child as well as a model law to deal with such disputes
- The government is contemplating assigning the National Commission for Protection of Children the responsibility to adjudicate on such cases along with a judicial expert
Paper-3: Conservation ,Environmental Pollution and Degradation,Environmental Impact Assessment.
Science-based targets
What is ‘Science Based Targets’?
- Science Based Targets is a joint initiative of CDP, the UN Global Compact (UNGC), the World Resources Institute (WRI) and WWF.
- It is an initiative to drive corporate climate actions globally.
- It sets emissions reduction targets to ensure that the transformational action is aligned with current climate science.
- It is ‘science-based’ as it is in line with the scale required to keep global temperature increase below 2°C compared to pre-industrial temperatures.
- ‘Science-based target setting’ is a way of boosting companies’ competitive advantage in transition to a low-carbon economy.
Uniqueness of this Initiative
- It is the criterion that companies need to commit to setting supply chain or ‘scope 3’ targets. That is, if more than 40 per cent of a company’s emissions occur in its supply chain, then the company has to commit to reducing those emissions as well as its direct emissions.
- This has the potential to rapidly escalate the impact of science-based target setting on global emissions, since all companies operate within a value chain.
For India-Its Significance
- India has committed to generate at least 40% of its electricity from non-fossil fuel sources.
- A decrease in carbon emission intensity of GDP by 33 to 35% by 2030 has also been committed.
- Indian companies and multinationals operating in India have a major role in this.Sixteen Indian companies have committed to set science-based targets.
- They have secured themselves competitive advantage in the transition.
- Mahindra Sanyo Steel became the first Indian company to set its science-based target. Globally, it is also the first steel company to set a target.