U.S.-India Strategic Clean Energy Partnership (SCEP)
The long history of energy cooperation between the United States and India have powered lives and livelihoods. On the margins of the April 2021 Leaders’ Summit on Climate, President Biden and Prime Minister Modi announced the launch of U.S.-India Climate and Clean Energy Agenda 2030 Partnership, to advance shared climate and clean energy goals. The Agenda 2030 Partnership includes two tracks in the form of the Strategic Clean Energy Partnership (SCEP) and the Climate Action and Finance Mobilization Dialogue. The SCEP was earlier established as the Strategic Energy Partnership in 2018 and had replaced the U.S.-India Energy Dialogue, the previous intergovernmental engagement for energy cooperation.
The SCEP advances energy security and innovation with greater emphasis on electrification and decarbonization of processes and end uses, scaling up emerging clean energy technologies while finding solutions for hard-todecarbonize sectors. Engagement with the private sector and other stakeholders will remain a priority.
Under the SCEP, the United States and India agreed to collaborate across five pillars: (1) Power and Energy Efficiency; (2) Renewable Energy; (3) Responsible Oil and Gas; (4) Sustainable Growth; and (5) Emerging Fuels.
Alongside these technical pillars, the sides agreed to continue cutting edge research and development through the longstanding U.S.-India Partnership to Advance Clean Energy-Research (PACE-R), prioritizing research on emerging clean energy technologies. In addition, the United States and India will continue to advance innovation in civil nuclear power as a net-zero solution through different collaborative programs including the longstanding Civil Nuclear Energy Working Group (CNEWG). The two countries will also engage the private sector and other stakeholders across the technical areas to help deploy clean technologies to accelerate a clean energy transition.
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