EPIC India News • December 5, 2025
Rural Households Highly Value Clean Water
A new study in rural India shows that doorstep delivery of water is a highly cost-effective way of enabling near universal adoption of clean drinking water.
A new study in rural India shows that doorstep delivery of water is a highly cost-effective way of enabling near universal adoption of clean drinking water.
The sixth edition of the EPIC India Dialogue revealed that delaying climate mitigation widens inequality, while rapid action helps save lives where it matters most.
The study in Nature found rainfall and flooding account for 8 percent of deaths during monsoon season in one of the world’s largest cities, Mumbai, India, comparable to… Learn More >
The November edition of our monthly newsletter spotlighted our senior leadership from the Emissions Market Accelerator and Gujarat Pollution Control Board being part of the Earthshot Prize Summit… Learn More >
In this edition of the EPIC India Dialogue, we explored how framing clean air through the lens of health, economy, and shared gains can turn evidence into urgency… Learn More >
The October edition of our monthly newsletter featured the Emissions Market Accelerator initiative and celebrated the state of Gujarat’s recognition as a finalist for the Earthshot Prize for… Learn More >
The Emissions Market Accelerator provides a custom-built solution to make emissions markets work anywhere, for any pollutant, by supporting governments from design to full operation.
Researchers affiliated with the Emissions Market Accelerator helped the Indian state of Gujarat design and launch the world’s first particulate pollution market. That project is now a finalist… Learn More >
The September edition of our monthly newsletter featured EPIC’s AQLI report, which finds air pollution as the leading external threat to global life expectancy, surpassing smoking and other… Learn More >
Record-breaking Canadian wildfires drove decade-high levels of pollution in Canada and the United States, while globally particulate air pollution remains the world’s greatest risk to human health.