U.S.-India Strategic Clean Energy
Partnership Ministerial Joint Statement
On 7 October, 2022, during
a Ministerial meeting of the U.S.-India Strategic Clean Energy Partnership (SCEP),
U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm and Indian Minister of Petroleum and Natural
Gas Hardeep S. Puri underscored the critical importance
of bilateral clean energy engagement to strengthen energy security and to accelerate
clean, secure, and just energy transition.
U.S.-India Strategic
Clean Energy Partnership Ministerial Joint Statement:
Amidst volatility in
global energy markets, continuing recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, and increasingly
frequent climate-related challenges, the United States and India reiterated their
commitment to accelerating a just and sustainable energy transition. As climate
and clean energy leaders, the United States and India share a common vision to deploy
clean energy at scale during this critical decade to reduce emissions and achieve
climate change mitigation goals, taking into account different national circumstances.
Through regular consultations on global energy markets, efforts to strengthen collective
energy security, and deepening technical engagement to support economy-wide decarbonization,
the two countries are proactively addressing the multiple crises that the world
faces through the U.S.-India Strategic Clean Energy Partnership.
During the engagements,
the two Ministers reviewed progress across the entire spectrum of the energy sector
partnership. They noted with appreciation the tremendous increase in bilateral energy
trade achieved over the last few years. They also welcomed the increased clean energy
collaboration between stakeholders of both countries which is facilitating expanded
clean energy investment, including in emerging technologies.
The Ministers also underscored
the importance of ensuring reliable energy supplies to ensure balanced energy markets,
including India’s support for the U.S. initiative to release crude oil from the
strategic petroleum reserves, and the importance of diversifying to clean energy
sources.
The Ministers stressed that climate and
clean energy collaboration should promote energy access, affordability, energy justice,
while supporting sustainable economic growth and just energy transitions. The Ministers
also recognized that ambitious national climate and clean energy goals require concerted
action and implementation at all levels of government to ensure their viability
and sustainability. Capacity building and exchanging best practices including with
all stakeholders were also highlighted as critical components to achieving the countries’
climate and clean energy ambitions.
India and the United States discussed
progress on continued efforts to advance emerging fuels and technologies and electrification
and decarbonization of end use sectors. The discussions covered hard-to-abate sectors,
and the Ministers were informed about various initiatives, including joint research
and development on smart grids and energy storage and new collaboration on carbon
capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) technologies, and the potential to explore
collaboration on other novel technologies under the U.S.-India Partnership to Advance
Clean Energy-Research (PACE-R).
The Ministers noted the Importance of
facilitating increased energy investments to ensure sustainable, affordable, reliable,
resilient and cleaner energy systems.
Enhanced bilateral efforts include:
·
Strengthening
the power grid to ensure reliable, affordable, and resilient clean energy supply
including through smart grids and energy storage;
·
Assessing
grid-integrated buildings, electric vehicles, and other distributed energy resources
to support load management;
·
Advancing
renewable energy development and deployment, including to support India’s goal of
achieving approximately 50 percent cumulative electric power installed capacity
from non-fossil fuel-based energy resources by 2030;
·
Advancing
energy efficiency and conservation in appliances, buildings and the industrial sector;
·
Electrifying
and decarbonizing the transportation sector including creating an enabling ecosystem
through setting up an Electric Vehicle (EV) financing services facility in India;
·
Reducing
emissions across the oil and gas value chain including efforts at deploying methane
detection and abatement technologies;
·
Decarbonizing
the industrial sector through efforts at electrification, carbon capture and storage,
and deployment of other clean emerging energy technologies;
·
Deepening
cooperation between Indian and U.S. Department of Energy labs and agencies, like
the EIA, and on energy data management, modeling, low
carbon technologies.
The Ministers also reiterated the importance
of private sector engagement to facilitate investment, inform policy, and accelerate
technology deployment. To that end, the United States and India continue to convene
public-private tasks forces on hydrogen and biofuels, and announced the launch of
a new Energy Storage Task Force to support large-scale integration of renewable
energy needed to support the clean energy transition. The Ministers welcomed collaboration
between Indian and U.S. companies through a Memorandum of Understanding to deploy
methane abatement technologies in India’s city gas distribution sector under the
Low Emissions Gas Task Force to help reduce emissions in the oil and gas sector.
Agencies from across the U.S. and Indian
governments demonstrated a number of accomplishments across the five technical pillars
of cooperation on: 1) Power & Energy
Efficiency,
2) Renewable Energy, 3) Responsible Oil &
Gas, 4) Sustainable Growth, and 5) Emerging Fuels and Technologies.
The Ministers welcomed expanded efforts
under the U.S.-India Strategic Clean Energy Partnership to support a just energy
transition to meet today’s unprecedented energy security and climate and energy
challenges.