Green finance has emerged as one of the most important policy and market tools for linking economic growth with environmental responsibility. It refers not only to green bonds, climate funds, and renewable-energy lending, but also to the wider financial architecture needed to support low-carbon, resource-efficient, and climate-resilient development. For a country such as India, where development priorities must be balanced with rising energy demand, infrastructure expansion, and ecological stress, green finance is not a peripheral issue; it is central to long-term economic stability. The present paper examines the role of green finance in supporting sustainable development in India, with special attention to the initiatives taken by public and private sector institutions. It also reviews green investments, including debt funding, green bonds, priority sector lending, institutional support, and emerging alternative channels such as crowd funding and blended finance. Using a descriptive approach based on secondary sources, the paper highlights India's financing needs, institutional responses, and the structural barriers that continue to slow progress. The discussion shows that while India has made a visible start in building a green finance ecosystem, the market remains constrained by high capital costs, risk perception, limited investor awareness, regulatory uncertainty, and insufficient project-evaluation frameworks. The paper concludes that India needs a clearer long-term green investment strategy, stronger policy coordination, deeper capital markets, and greater participation from both domestic and international investors if green finance is to support inclusive and durable development.
Khule et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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