India has set the most ambitious renewable energy target of any major economy — 500 GW of non-fossil capacity by 2030. It is building the world’s largest solar parks. It leads on solar manufacturing scale-up. By any metric of climate ambition, India is punching above its weight.
But ambition is not the same as adaptation. And in the villages that are already living with climate breakdown, the gap between official aspiration and ground-level reality is stark.
What Is Happening on the Ground
In Vidarbha, which has seen 15 consecutive years of erratic monsoons, farmers tell me that the National Adaptation Fund allocations exist on paper but take three to five years to reach village-level implementation committees. In coastal Odisha, mangrove restoration targets were met on satellite imagery through paper reporting but verified NGO surveys found only 40% actual planting.
The problem is not intent. It is capacity, accountability, and the gap between national policy and local delivery — a gap that exists in every federal system but which India’s size and complexity makes particularly acute.