Yadav Calls For Sustainable, Climate-Resilient Real Estate
The Minister stressed that development and environmental protection are complementary objectives that must advance together. Highlighting the sector’s influence on energy consumption, water use, waste generation, air quality and urban heat, he said real estate will play a central role in achieving India’s climate commitments, including the Net Zero target by 2070. Sustainability, he added, is no longer optional but the foundation of future-ready development. With climate change increasingly affecting cities, he called for climate-resilient planning, including flood-resilient layouts, heat-adaptive building materials, expanded green cover and sustainable mobility solutions.
Yadav outlined reforms undertaken by the Ministry to modernise environmental governance, such as strengthening environmental clearance mechanisms, expanding digital and technology-driven systems, adopting a risk-based regulatory approach, advancing Mission LiFE and the Green Credit Programme, and reinforcing air and water quality frameworks in urban areas. He assured industry stakeholders that the government seeks to reward efficient compliance while acting firmly against violations, noting that ease of doing business cannot come at the cost of environmental safeguards, nor should environmental protection result in avoidable delays.
Encouraging the sector to take the lead, the Minister urged developers to adopt energy-efficient designs, renewable energy, water-positive developments, circular construction practices and green buildings, which he said would create long-term value for cities and citizens. Acknowledging CREDAI’s engagement, Yadav reiterated that industry bodies are partners in national development and reaffirmed the government’s commitment to sustainable urbanisation, regulatory reform and collaborative governance to ensure Indian cities grow in harmony with nature.