Chapter-10

Chapter 10: Climate Change & SDGs | BankerBro JAIIB
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Climate Change & SDGs

17 SDGs, 169 targets, 2016-2030 timeframe. India pledged net-zero by 2070. Climate change could lower India’s GDP by 2.8% per year by 2050. Banks are now frontline actors in the climate transition — through green finance.

⏱ 14 min read🎯 High Exam Weightage🌿 SDGs + Panchamrit + CSR⚡ Flash Cards Inside

Banky is asked about green loans! 🌱

A solar farm developer walked in asking for ₹25 crore loan. The branch manager said “This falls under Priority Sector — renewable energy!” Banky realised climate policy directly affects banking — through green finance, green bonds and PSL norms.

“Sir, what are SDGs and why does RBI have a ‘Sustainable Finance Group’? And what’s Panchamrit?” 🌿
🌍

Sections 1-3 — Overview: Climate Change, SDGs and Banking

Why climate and sustainability matter for every banker

🧑‍💼
Sir, climate change is a science topic — why is it in JAIIB?
👨‍🏫
Because banks are now required to manage climate risk! RBI has a Sustainable Finance Group. Banks must assess climate-related risks in their loan portfolios. Green finance — loans to solar farms, wind energy, green buildings — is now a priority sector. India’s SDG targets drive government spending, which drives bank credit. Section 135 of Companies Act 2013 mandates CSR — another banking product. Climate change could lower India’s GDP by 2.8% per year by 2050 — which means more loan defaults. Banks are central to the climate solution.

Section 4 — Key Concepts

SDGs, Climate Action, India’s commitments and CSR — all from the textbook

17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

Announced by United Nations General Assembly in September 2015. Time frame: 2016-2030. Total: 17 Goals + 169 Targets. Proposed at Rio+20 (June 2012). Superseded Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

1. No Poverty
2. Zero Hunger
3. Good Health & Well-being
4. Quality Education
5. Gender Equality
6. Clean Water & Sanitation
7. Affordable & Clean Energy
8. Decent Work & Economic Growth
9. Industry, Innovation & Infrastructure
10. Reduced Inequality
11. Sustainable Cities & Communities
12. Responsible Consumption & Production
13. Climate Action ⭐
14. Life Below Water
15. Life on Land
16. Peace, Justice & Strong Institutions
17. Partnerships to Achieve the Goals

India’s “Panchamrit” — Five Climate Commitments (COP26, Glasgow, November 2021)

Five Panchamrit Commitments

  • (i) Net zero emissions by 2070
  • (ii) 500 Giga Watt non-fossil energy capacity by 2030
  • (iii) 50% of energy requirements from renewable sources by 2030
  • (iv) Reduce total projected carbon emissions by one billion tonnes from now to 2030
  • (v) Reduce carbon intensity of economy by less than 45% by 2030
  • India also announced ‘One Sun, One World, One Grid’ (OSOWOG) at COP26
  • ‘Plastic Hackathon 2021’ — India free of single-use plastic by 2022

India’s SDG Progress

  • India’s SDG score: 60 (2019) → 66 (2021)
  • Improvements led by: clean water & sanitation + affordable & clean energy
  • Kerala ranked first on SDG India Index
  • Followed by: Himachal Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Goa
  • SDG coordination entrusted to NITI Aayog
  • Flagship programmes aligned to SDGs: Swachh Bharat, Make in India, Skill India, Digital India
  • Climate change could lower India’s GDP by 2.8% per year by 2050 (World Bank)

CSR — Companies Act 2013

  • Section 135 of Companies Act 2013 provides legal support for CSR in India
  • Schedule VII provides overall direction for CSR efforts
  • Companies must spend 2% of net profits on CSR
  • Companies can spend more than 2%; excess can be set off against future CSR obligations
  • Non-compliance: civil wrong (not criminal) since 2020 amendment
  • Penalty: at least Rs. 1 crore for defaulting company
  • Penalty for defaulting officer: at least Rs. 2 lakhs
  • 2019 amendment introduced imprisonment (max 3 years); 2020 amendment replaced with penalty regime

Green Finance in Banking

  • RBI included small renewable energy sector in PSL scheme in 2015
  • Under PSL: renewable energy firms eligible for loans up to ₹30 crore (increased from ₹15 crore since September 4, 2020)
  • Households eligible for loans up to ₹10 lakh for renewable energy
  • India started issuing green bonds since 2015
  • Outstanding green bonds in India (Feb 12, 2020): US$16.3 billion
  • Green bonds issued since Jan 1, 2018: ~US$8 billion = 0.7% of all bonds issued
  • Bank credit to non-conventional energy: 7.9% of power sector credit (March 2020)
  • RBI Discussion Paper on Climate Risk and Sustainable Finance: July 27, 2022
  • SBI introduced ‘green car loans’ for electric vehicles — 20 basis points lower interest rate
  • SEBI mandated Business Responsibility Reports for top 100 listed entities since 2012
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Section 5 — Exam Angle Points

All PYQ answers verbatim + high-frequency facts

✅ Must-Know Facts — Verified from PDF

  • SDGs announced: September 2015 by United Nations General Assembly
  • SDG time frame: 2016-2030
  • Number of SDGs: 17 | Number of targets: 169
  • SDGs proposed at: Rio+20, United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, June 2012
  • SDGs superseded: Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) which were expiring in 2015
  • SDG 13: Climate Action — “Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts”
  • Global warming limit target: 1.5°C — scientists recommend cutting emissions by 45% by 2030 (vs 2010 levels)
  • 193 Parties (192 countries + EU) communicated first NDC to UNFCCC (as of April 2022)
  • 123 countries reported national disaster risk reduction strategies (as of Dec 31, 2021)
  • Climate change cause (primary, since 1800s): Human activities — combustion of fossil fuels
  • Climate change is a poverty multiplier — increases number of poor and makes them further poorer
  • India’s SDG score: 60 (2019) → 66 (2021) — improvements in clean water & sanitation + clean energy
  • Top state on SDG Index: Kerala (then HP, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Goa)
  • SDG coordination in India: NITI Aayog
  • India net-zero emissions target: 2070 (pledged at COP26, Glasgow, November 2021)
  • Panchamrit — 500 GW non-fossil energy capacity by: 2030
  • Panchamrit — 50% energy from renewables by: 2030
  • Panchamrit — reduce carbon emissions by: 1 billion tonnes (now to 2030)
  • Panchamrit — carbon intensity reduction by: Less than 45% by 2030
  • OSOWOG: One Sun, One World, One Grid — announced at COP26
  • Climate change GDP impact (World Bank projection): 2.8% per year lower by 2050
  • CSR legal basis: Section 135 of Companies Act 2013
  • CSR direction: Schedule VII of Companies Act 2013
  • CSR mandatory spending: 2% of net profits
  • CSR non-compliance: Civil wrong (NOT criminal) since 2020 amendment
  • CSR penalty (company): At least Rs. 1 crore
  • CSR penalty (officer): At least Rs. 2 lakhs
  • 2019 CSR amendment: Treated non-compliance as criminal; 2020 amendment reversed this to civil penalty
  • RBI PSL for renewable energy: Since 2015 | Firms: up to ₹30 crore | Households: up to ₹10 lakh
  • India green bonds outstanding (Feb 2020): US$16.3 billion
  • India renewable energy target (announced 2019): 450 GW by 2030
  • RBI Discussion Paper on Climate Risk: July 27, 2022
  • National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC): Formulated 2008

📝 Actual PYQ Answers from PDF

Q1: Which section of Companies Act 2013 provides legal support for CSR?
(a) Section 135 (b) Section 235 (c) Section 295 (d) Section 195
Answer: (a) Section 135
Q2: Climate change is likely to lower India’s GDP by ___ per year by 2050 (World Bank)?
(a) 6.8% (b) 2.8% (c) 9.8% (d) 0.8%
Answer: (b) 2.8 per cent per year
Q3: Which Indian state leads the SDG index 2021 by NITI Aayog?
(a) Telangana (b) Karnataka (c) Kerala (d) Gujarat
Answer: (c) Kerala
Q4: India aims to achieve target of net zero emissions by which year?
(a) 2030 (b) 2040 (c) 2050 (d) 2070
Answer: (d) 2070
Q5: To limit global warming to 1.5°C, scientists recommend by 2030 global emissions should be cut by ___ compared to 2010 levels?
(a) 45% (b) 25% (c) 5% (d) 10%
Answer: (a) 45 per cent

Section 6 — Flash Cards & Summary

10-minute revision before your JAIIB exam

SDGs Announced
September 2015 | 17 goals + 169 targets
Time frame 2016-2030 | Proposed at Rio+20 June 2012 | Superseded MDGs
SDG 13
Climate Action
“Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts”
Global Warming Limit
1.5°C — cut emissions 45% by 2030
Compared to 2010 levels | Current commitments set for 14% INCREASE
India Net Zero Target
2070 (pledged COP26, Glasgow, Nov 2021)
Part of India’s Panchamrit commitments
Panchamrit — 500 GW
Non-fossil energy capacity by 2030
50% energy from renewables by 2030 | 1 bn tonnes carbon reduction by 2030
India SDG Score
60 (2019) → 66 (2021)
Kerala = #1 | NITI Aayog coordinates SDGs in India
Climate GDP Impact
2.8% per year lower by 2050
World Bank projection | Climate change = poverty multiplier
CSR Legal Basis
Section 135, Companies Act 2013
Schedule VII gives direction | 2% of net profits mandatory
CSR Non-Compliance
Civil wrong (NOT criminal) since 2020
Company: ≥₹1 crore penalty | Officer: ≥₹2 lakhs | 2019 had imprisonment
RBI PSL Renewable Energy
₹30 crore firms | ₹10 lakh households
PSL category since 2015 | ₹30 cr limit since Sep 4, 2020 (was ₹15 cr)

⚡ Chapter 10 Complete — Climate Change & SDGs

  • 17 SDGs + 169 targets announced by UN General Assembly in September 2015 | Time frame: 2016-2030
  • Proposed at Rio+20 (June 2012) | Superseded MDGs | SDG 13 = Climate Action
  • Global warming limit = 1.5°C | Must cut emissions 45% by 2030 (vs 2010) | Current path = 14% increase
  • Climate change = poverty multiplier | Primary cause since 1800s: human activities (fossil fuel combustion)
  • India pledged net-zero by 2070 at COP26, Glasgow, November 2021
  • Panchamrit: Net-zero 2070 | 500 GW non-fossil by 2030 | 50% renewable energy 2030 | Reduce 1 bn tonnes | 45% carbon intensity reduction
  • India SDG score: 60 (2019) → 66 (2021) | Kerala = top state | NITI Aayog coordinates
  • Climate change to lower India’s GDP by 2.8% per year by 2050 (World Bank)
  • CSR: Section 135, Companies Act 2013 | Schedule VII | 2% net profits mandatory
  • CSR non-compliance = civil wrong (2020 amendment) | NOT criminal | Company ≥₹1 crore, Officer ≥₹2 lakh
  • RBI included renewable energy in PSL in 2015 | Firms: ₹30 crore | Households: ₹10 lakh
  • India green bonds: US$16.3 billion outstanding (Feb 2020) | 0.7% of all bonds since 2018
  • RBI Discussion Paper on Climate Risk and Sustainable Finance: July 27, 2022
  • OSOWOG — One Sun, One World, One Grid — announced COP26 | Plastic Hackathon 2021
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Banky says: “Now I can structure that ₹25 crore solar loan correctly — it’s a PSL green finance loan!” 🌱

You know all 17 SDGs, India’s Panchamrit commitments, net-zero 2070, CSR rules (Section 135), green finance PSL limits and all 5 PYQ answers. You’re a green banker now! 💪

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