Clean Future

CSR In Clean Energy

According to the World Energy Outlook, as of 2016 about 300 million people in India were lacking access to energy, while an even higher number faced intermittent access. This was estimated to cost the country approximately 7% of its GDP5 annually.

India’s Section 135 of the Companies Act, 2013 has created a historic opportunity for companies to enable widespread social change through systematic Corporate Social Responsibility( CSR )activities.

The clean energy sector represents a $160 billion opportunity. There is low CSR presence in clean energy, out of the 100 companies, only 39 had programs in clean energy; this is low compared to the level of CSR activity in other cause areas; where more than 50% of the top 100 companies have CSR programs in education, sanitation or skills and livelihoods.

Companies in power and oil and gas industries are most likely to support clean energy projects, capitalising on the strategic alignment and leveraging core competencies. These were followed by the manufacturing and heavy engineering industry, focusing on communities in the vicinity of factories and regional offices.

The following reasons have been highlighted for relatively low participation:

 

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Sourced from Samhita Social Ventures, a CSR consulting organisation, Shakti Sustainable Energy Foundation and the International Finance Corporation.

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