Potential Legal Risks Associated with by Cadmium Telluride Solar Cells in India: A Literature Review
インドにおけるテルル化カドミウム太陽電池に関連する潜在的な法的リスク:文献レビュー (AI 翻訳)
Dibyendu Mukhopadhyay, Dr. Gaurav Gupta, Hydrel Power
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本レビューは、インドにおけるテルル化カドミウム(CdTe)太陽電池の導入に伴う法的リスクを文献から整理する。持続可能な開発目標(SDGs)や気候変動枠組みを背景に、再生可能エネルギーへの移行の一環として太陽光発電が注目される中、CdTe太陽電池のライフサイクル全体(原料採取から廃棄まで)にかかるインド中央法との整合性を検討する。特に、設置・使用段階での法的課題を抽出し、SDG目標13達成への示唆を与える。
English
This literature review outlines legal risks associated with adopting Cadmium Telluride (CdTe) solar cells in India. It contextualizes the energy transition within SDGs and the Paris Agreement, focusing on the lifecycle legal compliance of CdTe technology from extraction to end-of-life. The review identifies challenges in Indian central legislation during installation and use, aiming to support SDG Goal 13 (climate action).
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本では、インドへの太陽電池輸出や投資に関心がある企業にとって、CdTe特有の法的リスク理解が重要。日本の廃棄物・リサイクル法制とも比較可能。
In the global GX context
For global readers, this review highlights legal barriers to deploying CdTe solar technology in India, a key emerging market. It informs international investors and policymakers about the regulatory environment affecting renewable energy adoption in developing countries.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides a comprehensive overview of legal literature on CdTe solar cells in India, useful for future empirical studies on renewable energy law.
🏢実務担当者:Limited direct applicability; may inform legal due diligence for solar project developers in India.
🏛政策担当者:Highlights gaps in Indian legislation for CdTe lifecycle management, offering input for regulatory reform.
📄 Abstract(原文)
‘The Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development: Our Common Future’ promulgated in 1987 is the fundamental document envisaged sustainability. The mission for sustainability has resulted into Rio Declaration, Agenda 21, Rio+5 Summit, which formulated Millenium Development Goals (MDGs) in 2000 by the United Nations. Gaps in Implementation of MDGs led formulation of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) in 2015 by the United Nations with 17 detailed and specialized goals. The equity of resource availability and utilization intergenerationally is to be ensured, by addressing environmental degradation, decrease in natural resources, poverty and hardship through reinforcement of economic interest, survival imperatives of people, reduction of poverty by alleviating environmental degradation, inequalities, inclusion of multiple stakeholders for deciding the welfare of economy, society, environment to minimize any adverse impact on planet earth by 2030. Goal-13 of SDG, ensures responsible action by addressing climate change for climate justice. The Inter-governmental Panel of Climate Change (IPCC) has come up with report on increasing temperature in the environment causes global warming and climate change due to increased concentration of carbon dioxide. This led many countries including India to sign Paris Agreement, 2015 for its reduction. This implied researchers to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the environment by reducing its emission, storage and removal of carbon dioxide by physical and chemical means. Reduction of emission of carbon dioxide through adoption and resultant transition to renewable energy systems from conventional non-renewable energy systems as one of the ways for climate justice is recognized by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). In which solar photovoltaics is a convenient form of renewable energy. Solar photovoltaics accounts for 9.61% percent energy mix of India on 30th April 2025, whereas, coal-fired thermal power accounts for approximately 74.58%. This difference is evident as there are many challenges associated with solar energy documented in academic literatures. The availability of coal in diverse geographically locations and its domestic access made many developing countries, like India to preclude them from geo-political meddling by any foreign power. However, coal is non-renewable energy resource, and its adverse impacts has led to agreements that compels India for energy transition. The review will outline those challenges and legal implications of adopting Cadmium Telluride Solar Cells pertaining to central legislature of India. The issues related to Cadmium Telluride solar cells with respect to life cycle analysis that includes laws enacted from extraction to end-of-life. Here, laws required to adhered at the time of installation during usage of solar cell is considered. The literature review will provide a narrative for challenges delineated by law as well as technology to achieve Goal-13 of SDG.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- semanticscholar https://doi.org/10.52783/mjble.457first seen 2026-06-29 09:11:17
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