Environmental Performance Index (EPI) 2022

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The Government of India (GoI) has questioned the parameters of the recently released Environmental Performance Index (EPI) 2022.

Environment Performance Index (EPI)

  • The EPI is an international ranking system of countries based on their environmental health. 
  • It is a biennial index, first started in 2002 as the Environment Sustainability Index by the World Economic Forum in collaboration with the Yale Centre for Environmental Law and Policy and Columbia University Center for International Earth Information Network.

Key Findings of recently released data 

  • EPI 2022 uses 40 performance indicators across 11 issue categories to assess and rank 180 countries. The 40 indicators are under the broad categories of climate change performance, environmental health, and ecosystem vitality. 
    • The 2022 EPI has included new parameters to its earlier assessments, with projections of progress towards net-zero emissions in 2050, as well as new air quality indicators, and sustainable pesticide use.
  • The report uses the most recent data, and the indicators measure how close countries are to meeting internationally established sustainability targets for specific environmental issues.
  • Denmark tops the list with a score of 77.9.

Image Courtesy: IE

 

Performance of India 

  • India: 
    • Rank and Score: 
      • EPI 2022 ranked India at the bottom position among 180 countries with a score of 18.9. 
      • India has fallen from rank 168 and a score of 27.6 in 2020. 
      • India comes after Pakistan, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Myanmar, the poorest performers. 
    • India ranks close to the bottom on a number of indicators including 
      • ecosystem vitality (178th), 
      • biodiversity (179th), 
      • biodiversity habitat index (170th), 
      • species protection index (175th), 
      • wetland loss, air quality (179th), 
      • PM 2.5 (174th), 
      • heavy metals such as lead in water (174th), 
      • waste management (151st) and 
      • climate policy (165th) including projected greenhouse gas emissions (171st).
      • India has also scored low on rule of law, control of corruption and government effectiveness.
  • Objection from GoI: The Environment Ministry has issued a rebuttal saying the indicators used in the assessment are based on “unfounded assumptions”.

Issues raised by India

  • Some of these indicators used for assessing performance are extrapolated and based on surmises and unscientific methods.
  • Baseline data does not seem to have been used.
  • Also, there has been no explanation for the weightages assigned to certain indicators. 
  • The shifting of weightage on many indicators has resulted in India’s low ranking. For example, for black carbon growth, India’s score actually improved from 32 in 2020 to 100 (the top score) in 2022, but the weightage of this indicator has been reduced to 0.0038 in 2022 from 0.018 in 2020.
  • The government has objected to calculations of greenhouse gas projections for 2050, which ties into countries’ net zero goals. India has set a net zero target for 2070, unlike developed nations that have set 2050.
  • Crucial carbon sinks that mitigate GHG, such as forests and wetlands, have not been taken into account. 
  • Objection to the low weightage given to per-capita GHG emissions (2.6%). India’s low emissions trajectory, unlike high historical trajectories of developed countries, has been ignored.
  • No indicator talks about renewable energy, energy efficiency and process optimization.
  • The index emphasises the extent of protected areas rather than the quality of protection that they afford; the computation of biodiversity indices does not factor in management effectiveness evaluation of protected areas the index computes the extent of ecosystems but not their condition or productivity; indicators such as agro biodiversity, soil health, food loss and waste are not included even though they are important for developing countries with large agrarian populations.

Views of  Environmental Scientists on the report

  • Weightages are the agency’s discretion, but giving climate change such a high weightage is problematic. The EPI 2022 makes an assumption that every country has to reach net-zero by 2050 — whereas the understanding is that developing countries will need more time. 
  • GHG emissions will continue to grow in poorer countries for a time, unlike many developed countries which have peaked. Countries can’t be expected to forgo energy for development. 
  • The EPI 2022 is neither ethically correct nor reflects the political reality. 
  • Moreover, the methodology that EPI has used for its 2050 projections, using last decade’s emissions, is extremely crude.
  • The EPI assumes every country is in the same position economically, developmentally and environmentally. In developing countries, of which many like India have low emissions trajectories, the contribution is not that emissions reduce but to avoid locking into higher emissions trajectories. 
  • Even if air pollution declines steadily, in countries like India and China, by virtue of their large populations the overall figure of the health burden or DALY for instance, will always be high and therefore will always fall in the bottom of the pile, if per-capita GHG emissions are given lower weightage.

Way Ahead

  • Despite the inconsistencies, the government should not ignore the fact that India was at 168th rank in 2020 and has never been in the top 150 countries since the index was started.
  • Regardless of the issues with the EPI, India does have severe local environmental issues, which have been highlighted in the report and need to be addressed.
  • It is vital to focus on sustainable developmental pathways that India needs to immediately adopt.

Source: IE