The
study warns that without urgent reforms, freight will become one of the most
critical obstacles to India’s net-zero 2070 pathway, even as logistics demand
keeps rising with economic growth.
The authors identify a core
problem: India lacks a harmonised, India-specific framework to measure freight
emissions across modes, corridors and operators, making it impossible to design
targeted decarbonisation policies or hold supply chains accountable. Today,
fragmented and inconsistent emissions accounting practices mean that many
companies cannot reliably track the carbon impact of their road, rail or
coastal freight activities, let alone optimise them.
To
address this, the whitepaper proposes a national freight emissions accounting
framework aligned with ISO 14083 and the GLEC (Global Logistics Emissions
Council) methodology, but calibrated with India-specific emission factors and
local data. It outlines a roadmap for a Clean Freight Program backed by a
digital MRV (monitoring, reporting and verification) platform and a
multi-stakeholder governance structure bringing together government, industry
and academia.
Experts quoted in the report
stress that “you cannot decarbonise what you cannot measure,” arguing that
standardised metrics are a prerequisite for measures like fleet modernisation,
mode shift to rail and waterways, green corridor development and access to
climate finance for small operators. The paper also flags structural barriers:
dominance of diesel-heavy road transport, higher upfront costs for EVs and
alternative fuels, and limited charging and refuelling infrastructure, all of which
risk locking India into a high-emissions freight trajectory unless tackled
systematically.