David Fickling, Columnist

India Is Scorning the Energy Bounty That Transformed China

Touting carbon capture and storage is wishful thinking at best, and dangerous shortsightedness at worst. Just look at China.

An under-exploited resource.

Photographer: Pallava Bagla/Corbis News/Getty Images

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You know an electricity policy is bankrupt when its advocates start touting the virtues of carbon capture and storage.

Decades of promoting the technology, also known as CCS — which aims to filter the carbon dioxide from smokestacks and inject the pollution deep underground — have failed to produce more than a handful of operating plants. So plans by India’s government think tank Niti Aayog to capture as much of 70% of the country’s power-sector emissions should be treated as wishful thinking at best, and dangerous shortsightedness at worst. “We have abundant coal and we want to use it, in a sustainable way,” the body’s energy adviser Rajnath Ram told Bloomberg News.