Our Annual Report 2023–2024 highlights how CSTEP's innovative solutions are driving a change on the ground.
India marked its presence as a serious contender in the green hydrogen space at the World Hydrogen Summit in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, which happened in May this year.
India, the fifth largest economy in the world, is ambitiously striving to achieve a USD 5-trillion economy in the near future, positioning itself among the top three global economies.
The announcement of India’s 2070 net-zero target has demonstrated the power of a credible policy signal and changed the course of India’s climate debate.
Carbon capture and utilisation (CCU) is an innovative concept that involves converting carbon dioxide (CO₂) captured from point sources of emission or the air into value-added products.
Urea is among the most consumed chemicals in India—as an indispensable fertiliser in agriculture, and, thereafter, as an important raw material for producing plastics, and nutrient feed for cattle.
Every year, climate action draws significant attention in the months leading up to the United Nations’ annual meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COPs).
At the 29th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP29), India voiced its disappointment at the climate finance announcement of $300 billion annually under the New Collective Quantified Goal (NCQG), and rightly so.
With sabka vikas as its theme, the Union Budget 2025-26 aims at stimulating balanced growth of all regions.
India’s total primary energy demand stood at 39 exajoules in 2022–23, with coal contributing 55 percent, crude oil 28 percent, natural gas 5.
Karnataka generated an estimated 12,140 tonnes of municipal solid waste (MSW) per day in 2023, with Bengaluru alone accounting for nearly half of this total.
Odisha’s agricultural and allied sectors, which are vital to the state’s economy, face growing threats from climate change and its associated extremes.
Odisha’s agricultural and allied sectors face severe threats from climate change.
Odisha’s agricultural and allied sectors, vital to the state’s economy, face mounting threats from climate change.
Punjab has a considerable dependence on thermal sources for meeting its energy demand.