About This Event

Indian cities are facing a converging challenge at the intersection of extreme heat, housing, and carbon emissions. Rapid urbanisation and the scale-up of affordable housing have driven construction practices that prioritise speed and upfront costs over thermal performance and overall efficiency. As a result, large segments of urban housing, particularly for low- and middle-income households, experience poor thermal comfort, high indoor heat stress, and a growing dependence on mechanical cooling. At the same time, the use of material-intensive, thermally inefficient materials locks in high embodied carbon and contributes to heat entrapment within buildings and neighbourhoods, driving higher long-term space-cooling energy demand and associated operational emissions.

Shifting toward thermally comfortable, low-carbon housing can reduce indoor heat stress and neighbourhood heat build-up, reduce future cooling demand and household energy expenditure, and
avoid long-term carbon lock-in arising from both embodied emissions during the construction phase and decades of operational energy use.

This convening seeks to position housing not as a passive recipient of climate impacts, but as a strategic entry point to advance thermal comfort for millions of people, accelerate innovation, and unlock scalable investment pathways in Indian cities.

Objective of the Session

To accelerate the delivery of thermally comfortable, low-carbon housing at scale in Indian cities. The following are the key sub-objectives:
Innovation: To examine how emerging low-carbon, thermally efficient materials and super-efficient cooling solutions can move from niche pilots to mainstream implementation.
Market and procurement enablement: To explore market strategies — such as green public procurement and buyer pledges or platforms — to accelerate widespread adoption of existing proven solutions.
Finance to de-risk adoption and innovation: To identify public, private, and blended finance pathways for mobilising investment to drive the adoption of various solutions and deliver
affordable, thermally comfortable, low-carbon housing.

Agenda

Time Session Speakers
10:00–10:05 a.m. Welcome and opening remarks
Introduction to the event, objectives, and framing of India’s opportunity in battery circularity.
Ms. Akshima Ghate
Managing Director, RMI India Program
Mr. Shashvat Singh
Senior Fellow, India Foundation
10:15–10:30 a.m. Presentation: Charting a circular battery future for India
Summary of key insights from the India Foundation–RMI report, highlighting the economic and mineral-security
benefits of battery reuse, repurposing, and recycling.
Ms. Marie McNamara
Manager, RMI
10:30–10:55 a.m. Remarks by senior thought leaders
Leadership remarks on how technology-enabled battery circularity can strengthen industrial competitiveness,
spur innovation, and position India as a leader in global battery value chains.
Amb. Ruchira Kamboj
Former Permanent Representative of India to the United Nations; Member, India Foundation Governing Council
Dr. Jon Creyts
CEO, RMI
10:55–11:25 a.m. Distinguished remarks
Government perspectives on how policy direction, institutional priorities, and national strategies can advance
India’s battery ecosystem and accelerate the circular economy.
Dr. Anita Gupta
Head of Scientific Division, Department of Science and Technology
Ms. Suman Chandra
Director, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy
10:55–11:25 a.m. Moderated discussion: Accelerating battery circularity in India
Guided discussion on implementation priorities, financing needs, and collaboration models to scale circularity.
Moderated by Ms. Akshima Ghate
Managing Director, RMI India Program
11:25–11:30 a.m. Closing reflections
Final remarks, synthesis of key themes, and next steps for collaboration under a Battery Circularity Lab initiative.
Mr. Shaurya Doval
Managing Director, Zeus Caps; Member, India Foundation Governing Council

Speakers

Ankit Kalanki

Principal, Carbon-Free Buildings

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