By Dipak Kurmi
Planet Earth remains humanity’s only home, yet it is a home we continue to degrade at a pace that outstrips the planet’s ability to heal. The contradiction is brutal: even as we choke the atmosphere with unprecedented levels of carbon emissions, we have no alternative refuge to flee to. Like the proverbial frog that fails to leap out of gradually boiling water, humanity seems unable to recognise the slow but deadly rise in planetary temperature. The recently released Global Carbon Budget 2025 report at COP30 in Belém, Brazil, has once again sounded the alarm that should have shaken world governments, financial institutions, and civil societies into action. Instead, the warning echoes into a void. While India’s carbon dioxide emissions are projected to rise by a modest 1.4 per cent this year—a slowdown shaped by an early monsoon that reduced cooling demand and a rapid expansion of renewable energy that kept coal use in check—the broader global picture is far grimmer. Fossil-fuel CO₂ emissions are poised to hit a record 38.1 billion tonnes, a figure that effectively places the 1.5°C warming limit beyond reach. Even India’s relatively encouraging trajectory is not the long-term relief it appears to be, because emissions continue to increase in absolute terms and because India remains among the top four global emitters alongside China, the United States, and the European Union. Together, these four regions account for nearly 60 per cent of global fossil-fuel CO₂ output, underscoring how far the world is from bending the carbon curve downward.
Beyond the rise in emissions, the report highlights an even more unsettling trend: the planet’s natural carbon sinks—forests, oceans, and soils—are losing their ability to absorb atmospheric CO₂. About 8 per cent of the rise in carbon concentration since 1960 can be attributed to climate change itself eroding the efficiency of these sinks. Nature’s built-in buffers are weakening at a moment when humanity needs them most. Even as some nations demonstrate progress—between 2015 and 2024, thirty-five countries successfully expanded their economies while reducing emissions—the global effort remains fatally incremental. With just 170 billion tonnes of carbon left in the global budget to remain under 1.5°C, equivalent to roughly four years of emissions at the current rate, the window for meaningful action is closing rapidly. For all the optimism India’s renewable strategy inspires, it must now accelerate into nothing less than a full-scale green revolution. As history repeatedly shows, the burden of meaningful climate action rests most heavily on developed nations—the largest historical polluters—who continue to fall short on ambition and accountability. The world has only one atmosphere and one climate system; humanity will either survive or perish collectively. At this point, the risk of sinking together appears alarmingly high.
It is in this global context that India’s Mission LiFE, introduced by the Hon’ble Prime Minister during COP-27, emerges not as another environmental initiative but as a moral reorientation of development itself. Mission LiFE, or Lifestyle for Environment, reframes sustainability from a regulatory mandate into a responsibility-driven behavioural ethos. Individual actions, he argued, can generate global climate impact when multiplied across society. This philosophy carries profound implications for India’s governance architecture, because it places citizens, corporations, public institutions, and communities at the centre of climate action rather than relegating them to passive beneficiaries of policy. Having observed the interplay between government policy, industrial processes, and public behaviour across multiple sectors, it becomes evident that while policy sets direction, only behavioural change builds momentum. India’s evolution toward a sustainable future therefore calls for LiFE 2.0—a phase that embeds sustainability into every dimension of public, corporate, and civic life, from energy consumption and water conservation to waste management and mobility choices.
LiFE 2.0 envisions a system where institutions adopt comprehensive behavioural audits to measure how organisational practices contribute to environmental outcomes. Public sector undertakings, ministries, and major enterprises can lead by example through internal assessments of their consumption patterns, procurement choices, and operational behaviours. Lessons from Smart City initiatives across India already show how minor shifts in citizen awareness—segregating household waste, conserving water, or adopting public transport—produce outsized social and ecological impacts. LiFE 2.0 can consolidate these experiments into a national standard that transforms behavioural change from episodic participation into an institutional habit. With India’s urban populations rising and resource stress deepening, the need for such systemic behavioural architecture has never been more urgent.
A critical dimension of LiFE 2.0 involves integrating behavioural economics into India’s rapidly expanding digital public infrastructure. By designing platforms that gently nudge citizens toward sustainable choices, India can reduce energy waste, encourage climate-friendly mobility patterns, and promote resource-conscious consumption. Imagine a national Green Nudge platform built into the country’s digital ecosystem, offering incentives to households, commuters, and retailers for adopting cleaner habits. Tiered electricity pricing, default renewable energy subscriptions, and interactive dashboards can create behavioural shifts without imposing coercive mandates. For instance, a state electricity board may introduce a digital Green Saver dashboard that automatically compares a household’s monthly energy use with similar homes in the locality. Families who remain below the neighbourhood’s average could earn cashback on digital utility payments or credits redeemable for energy-efficient appliances. This peer-comparison model, which has shown remarkable success in countries such as the United States and Singapore, can nudge populations toward efficiency without resentment or resistance. By refining these tools, India can export behavioural policy innovations to the Global South, converting climate-conscious governance into geopolitical influence.
However, true transformation must take root at the community level, not merely in policy frameworks or corporate boardrooms. The creation of Climate Community Clusters can decentralise climate governance by linking district administrations, panchayats, civil society groups, colleges, and youth organisations. Empowering communities with open climate data, local dashboards, and digital storytelling tools can democratise environmental knowledge and generate a sense of ownership over sustainable futures. Across India, grassroots movements have repeatedly demonstrated that community engagement often outperforms central directives in speed, scale, and cultural resonance. Embedding Mission LiFE within such clusters ensures that climate action is not confined to conferences and policy papers but becomes a lived reality within mohallas, villages, towns, and campuses.
Women and youth, the true social capital of modern India, must be positioned at the heart of this transformation. With nearly eighty million members, women’s self-help groups represent an extraordinary network capable of spearheading micro-enterprises in renewable energy, waste management, and water governance. Empowering these groups with training, financial tools, and green entrepreneurship models can multiply the impact of LiFE across rural India. Similarly, a national cohort of LiFE Youth Fellows can foster a generation of leaders trained at the intersection of sustainability, innovation, and civic responsibility. Aligning these efforts with NEP 2020 and the Skill India Mission ensures that sustainability becomes not only a lifestyle choice but a legitimate economic pathway. When women and youth lead climate action, the shift from awareness to transformation becomes not only possible but scalable.
Effective climate transformation demands more than information; it requires inspiration. Public communication and education must therefore be reimagined to make sustainability aspirational. A National LiFE Awareness Grid connecting universities, media organisations, ed-tech firms, and public institutions can amplify stories of innovation, local leadership, and behavioural change. Incorporating sustainability into curricula, visual storytelling, and national digital challenges can reshape cultural narratives. When environmental responsibility becomes a marker of national pride rather than a compliance burden, behavioural change accelerates naturally.
Ultimately, the success of India’s long-term national goals—from Net Zero 2070 to Viksit Bharat 2047—depends on anchoring development in behavioural transformation. Mission LiFE provides the architectural blueprint for this shift by aligning policy, technology, and human behaviour into a unified system. Institutionalising LiFE in schools, corporate offices, government ministries, and public spaces can make responsible consumption intuitive rather than sacrificial. Growth is not hindered by behavioural change; it is sustained by it. If public policy represents the skeleton of national transformation, people are undoubtedly its soul. Only by aligning both can India help lead the world back from the brink and secure a future that remains livable for all.
(The writer can be reached at dipakkurmiglpltd@gmail.com)

























