dc.description.abstract | The study examines the dynamics of carbon emissions baselines of electricity generation in Indian states and Chinese provinces in
the backdrop of ongoing electricity sector reforms in these countries. Two Indian states—Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh, and three
Chinese provinces–Guangdong, Liaoning and Hubei have been chosen for detailed analysis to bring out regional variations that are
not captured in aggregate country studies. The study finds that fuel mix is the main driver behind the trends exhibited by the carbon
baselines in these five cases. The cases confirm that opportunities exist in the Indian and Chinese electricity sectors to lower carbon
intensity mainly in the substitution of other fuels for coal and, to a lesser extent, adoption of more efficient and advanced coal-fired
generation technology. Overall, the findings suggest that the electricity sectors in India and China are becoming friendlier to the
global environment. Disaggregated analysis, detailed and careful industry analysis is essential to establishing a power sector carbon
emissions baseline as a reference for CDM crediting. However, considering all the difficulties associated with the baseline issue, our
case studies demonstrate that there is merit in examining alternate approaches that rely on more aggregated baselines. | |