SYLLABUS
GS-3: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment.
Context: The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) recently released two thematic SDG Bulletins on Planet and Prosperity during a capacity-building workshop on SDG monitoring, environment accounts, and gender statistics.
About the Bulletin
- The bulletins— “Planet in Focus: Advancing Environmental Sustainability under the SDGs” and “Delivering Prosperity at Scale: India’s Economic Transformation through the SDGs”—are part of a new thematic SDG bulletin series aligned with the five pillars of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: People, Planet, Prosperity, Peace, and Partnerships.
- They provide a concise, data-driven overview of India’s SDG progress by integrating key indicators, policy initiatives, and national achievements.
- The reports are based on the latest official data from the SDG National Indicator Framework Progress Report 2025, which serves as India’s primary statistical framework for monitoring SDGs.
- Planet Bulletin focuses on SDGs 6, 12, 13, 14, and 15, covering areas like water, climate, biodiversity, and sustainable consumption.
- Prosperity Bulletin focuses on SDGs 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11, emphasizing inclusive growth, infrastructure, energy, and inequality reduction.
- The bulletins aim to enhance awareness and policy understanding through accessible and evidence-based insights on India’s SDG performance.
Key Highlights
Planet Dimension (Environmental Sustainability):
- Sanitation and Social Transformation: India’s achievement of 100% Open Defecation Free (ODF) status across all districts marks a historic public health milestone.
- This transformation is complemented by 97.2% of schools having gender-segregated toilets (2023–24), which has improved dignity, safety, and educational participation, especially for girls.
- Waste Management and Circular Economy Transition: India has significantly strengthened its waste management ecosystem, with recycling infrastructure expanding from 829 facilities in 2019–20 to 3,036 in 2024–25.
- Door-to-door waste collection coverage has risen to 97.7%, indicating a systemic shift toward scientific waste processing, circular economy practices, and reduced landfill dependency.
- Climate Action and Disaster Resilience: India has made notable progress in disaster preparedness by aligning with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030).
- A large number of local governments have adopted disaster risk reduction strategies, supported by advanced early warning systems, climate forecasting tools, and community-level preparedness initiatives.
- Environmental Governance and Policy Framework: A robust legislative and institutional framework—including laws like the Environment Protection Act and national missions such as the National Action Plan on Climate Change—has strengthened India’s environmental governance.
- This integrated approach ensures that sustainability is embedded across sectors and policies.
- Global Leadership and Sustainability Commitments: India has emerged as a key global player in environmental governance through its commitments under the Paris Agreement, UNCCD, and biodiversity conventions.
- Initiatives like LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment) further demonstrate India’s effort to promote sustainable lifestyles at both national and global levels.
Prosperity Dimension (Economic Transformation):
- Energy Transition and Low-Carbon Growth: India’s clean energy transition has accelerated, with the country becoming the fourth-largest wind energy producer globally.
- The share of renewable energy has increased from 16.02% (2015–16) to 22.13% (2024–25), while carbon intensity of the power sector has declined significantly. The achievement of 100% household electrification reflects rapid expansion of inclusive energy access.
- Employment, Skills, and Inclusive Growth: Economic growth has been supported by a strong focus on job creation, skill development, and entrepreneurship. Initiatives such as Skill India, MUDRA, and Start-up India have strengthened livelihoods, while programmes like MGNREGA have ensured income security and reduced rural vulnerability.
- Infrastructure, Digital Connectivity and Innovation: India has made substantial progress in infrastructure development, particularly in digital connectivity, with over 99% population coverage under mobile networks.
- Programmes like BharatNet and Digital India have enabled widespread access to digital services, fostering innovation, financial inclusion, and improved service delivery.
- Urban Development and Sectoral Growth Drivers: Urban transformation initiatives such as the Smart Cities Mission and AMRUT have enhanced livability, infrastructure, and governance in cities.
- Additionally, sectors like tourism have emerged as key drivers of economic growth, contributing significantly to GDP, employment generation, and regional development.
- Digital Inclusion and Socio-Economic Impact: The expansion of digital infrastructure has enabled transformative changes across sectors, including financial inclusion through UPI, efficient governance via Aadhaar-enabled systems, improved healthcare access through telemedicine, and expanded educational opportunities through online platforms.
- Reduction in Inequality and Social Protection: India has recorded a decline in household consumption inequality between 2011–12 and 2023–24, reflecting the impact of targeted social protection programmes, financial inclusion initiatives, and inclusive development policies.
