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						 Modi 
						says India to strike own path in climate battle 
		
		 
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		[April 06, 2015] 
		NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian Prime 
		Minister Narendra Modi signaled on Monday he would not bow to foreign 
		pressure to commit to cuts in carbon emissions, instead pledging to use 
		more clean energy and traditional methods to lead the fight against 
		climate change. 
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			 India, the world's No.3 emitter of greenhouse gases, has come under 
			pressure to tackle its rapidly rising emissions since the United 
			States and China committed last November to start cutting their own 
			emissions after a "peak year". 
			 
			United Nations climate talks will be held in Paris later this year 
			to look at ways to limit a damaging rise in global temperatures. 
			Getting India to agree to a strategy to lower its own emissions is 
			vital if the talks are to be judged a success. 
			 
			"The world guides us on climate change and we follow them? The world 
			sets the parameters and we follow them? It is not like that," Modi 
			said at an event in Delhi. "We can lead the world." 
			 
			The Indian government has said it needs to emit more to 
			industrialize and lift millions out of poverty. 
			
			  
			While Modi has in the past highlighted the dangers posed by climate 
			change, he has also argued that the world must focus more on clean 
			energy and less on outright emission cuts. 
			 
			India has set an ambitious target to raise renewable energy 
			generation but is also expanding the mining of coal, a major 
			contributor to its growing emissions. 
			 
			On Monday, Modi suggested using traditional methods such as 
			switching off street lights on full-moon nights to save on energy 
			and cut emissions. 
			 
			Modi also accused the world of double standards by lecturing India 
			about the environment but refusing to sell it the fuel needed for 
			nuclear power. 
			
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			Some countries maintain a ban on selling uranium to India because 
			New Delhi has refused to ratify the nuclear non-proliferation 
			treaty. 
			 
			Modi will begin an overseas trip to Europe and Canada this week and 
			is expected to push for more help in expanding India's civil nuclear 
			industry and easing the uranium ban. 
			 
			(Reporting by Aditya Kalra and Tommy Wilkes; Editing by Douglas 
			Busvine and Tom Hogue) 
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