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The slow advancement of the carbon dioxide removal (CDR) industry highlights an vital limitation in global climate strategies. While technological innovations like CDR offer hope for addressing residual emissions after substantial reductions, their success hinges on parallel strides toward curbing overall greenhouse gas outputs.For India-a country grappling with balancing economic growth and environmental sustainability-this serves as a reminder that relying solely on high-cost technologies like CDR could provide diminishing returns if emission reduction targets aren’t prioritized first.
Given India’s role as one of the world’s largest emitters and its commitment under international agreements such as the Paris Accord,investments shoudl focus more heavily on scaling renewable energy adoption and promoting aggressive policy reform geared towards emission cuts. Meanwhile, any engagement with CDR technologies must acknowledge their reliance on complementary global action rather than serving as standalone fixes for larger structural challenges inherent in climate mitigation frameworks globally.