India is witnessing rapid growth in municipal solid waste (MSW) and industrial waste driven by urbanisation, rising consumption, and industrial expansion. While global waste generation is projected to reach 3.4–3.8 billion tonnes annually by 2050, India alone generates 62 million tonnes of MSW per year and 18–20 million tonnes of industrial waste, yet only 22–28% is scientifically processed. This creates significant challenges for waste management, climate change mitigation, and resource efficiency.
Waste‑to‑Energy (WtE) offers a critical pathway for India to simultaneously address waste disposal, reduce methane emissions—which account for 18–20% of global anthropogenic methane from waste—and displace fossil fuels through energy recovery. Existing WtE infrastructure remains limited, with only ~278 MW of operational MSW‑based WtE capacity across 21 plants that collectively treat 19,000–21,000 TPD of waste. Industrial waste streams, with their higher calorific value, present stronger technical feasibility for energy recovery but lack a unified carbon accounting framework.
It provides the analytical foundation to develop an India-specific WtE carbon offset methodology under CCTS, addressing MSW and industrial waste streams. The work
A comprehensive methodology will unlock carbon finance for WtE, improve project bankability, enhance environmental integrity, and accelerate India’s transition toward sustainable waste management and low‑carbon development.
The objective of this assignment is to develop a new methodology for Waste-to-Energy applications in the context of the Indian Carbon Market, harmonised with established global frameworks and best practices to ensure the environmental integrity of voluntary carbon credits. The assignment aims to achieve this through the submission of the following deliverables:

The project outcomes span strategic, policy, technical, and institutional areas, providing scalable and long-term impact for industrial WtE under domestic carbon markets.