26.1 C
Delhi
Saturday, February 21, 2026

How India scripted its renewables growth story

In 2024, Nirmal Das Swami, a farmer in Rajasthan, began harvesting the power of the sun. Nirmal installed a one-megawatt solar park on his land, enough to power his entire community. With access to steady, affordable, and clean energy, Nirmal’s income grew. Nirmal is part of a larger transformation happening in India. Boosted by the increasing economic viability of renewables, India is outpacing other major developing countries in scaling cost-effective clean energy. It is set to add more renewables to its grid than the US this year. Non-fossil fuel sources now account for 50% of its installed capacity.

India’s progress here is a result of three key factors — the government’s big bet on universal energy access, a willingness to experiment, and strong public-private-philanthropic partnerships.

First, the government recognised that access to electricity is essential for unlocking health, education, jobs, and opportunity. Today, the big development challenge — and opportunity — is access to power. As renewables became more affordable than fossil fuels, the government seized the opportunity. By 2018, India reached its goal of bringing electricity to every village. Last year, overall power output increased at its fastest pace since 2022.

Second, India has displayed a growing appetite for innovation, testing new technologies, taking risks, and accelerating implementation. For instance, the PM KUSUM subsidy scheme has helped farmers repurpose their land for solar plants. The country also introduced reverse auctions, encouraged local manufacturing, and incentivised non-fossil fuel energy.

The third factor is novel partnerships with businesses, philanthropies, and communities. Public-private-philanthropic models represent a sustainable approach to development in the 21st century, driving faster innovation and smarter risk-taking than any sector can achieve alone. Those partnerships have supported building and scaling solar grid systems across the country.

The Global Energy Alliance (GEA) — working with the Rajasthan government — deployed digital tools for farmers to lease their land to utilities for solar projects. Within two years, this added 183 MW to the previously-projected solar capacity and helped farmers transition approximately 14,000 agricultural pumps from diesel to solar.

But it’s still a long road to the government’s ambitious goal of 500 gigawatts of non-fossil capacity. Scaling battery storage and accelerating digital solutions will be key to ensuring the grid is more reliable, efficient, and resilient. At Mumbai Climate Week, the GEA launched the India Grids of the Future Accelerator, a platform bringing together utilities, technology leaders, investors, philanthropies and more to digitise India’s grid and bring distributed renewables to communities. This seeks to reach 300 million Indians, support 15 utilities to build digital twins, and enable expansion of 100 GW of new distributed renewables.

India’s big bet on universal, affordable, abundant energy is shaping how Africa, Latin America, and the Asia-Pacific regions approach their own energy transitions. One such example is Mission 300, led by the World Bank and African Development Bank, which aims to connect 300 million people across sub-Saharan Africa to electricity by 2030.

As the private sector, philanthropies, and other investors grow more interested in clean energy, bigger, more diverse coalitions connecting even more people to the 21st-century economy can be expected.

Rajiv J Shah is the president of The Rockefeller Foundation. The views expressed are personal

Latest

What Japan has meant to India, through a lens of history

Initially, Indians believed that the Japanese owed their “unexampled” rise to their “intense craving” for “useful knowledge”

Riding high on hope, waiting for deliverance

Despite the deluge of optimism in Dhaka following the BNP’s win, Bangladesh’s political economy remains unchanged. This poses its own risks

There’s a Make in India twist in New Delhi-Paris ties

France and India hold similar views on seminal issues surrounding AI relating to ethics, trust and inclusion

Why the UK wants to partner with India’s AI innovators

The UK is a country with a long history of invention and ingenuity, and today, that spirit is alive and well in our AI labs, universities and tech companies

RBI checks on mis-selling will likely fail their purpose

The central bank’s regulations do not go far enough to be effective on the ground. They need to be deeply prescriptive

Topics

Freedom from rounds of govt offices; 75 govt services now available for just Rs 30 at 7,000 centres across Delhi

Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta on Saturday inaugurated the CM Jan Sunwai Portal and app, e-District services via CSC, and an online EWS/DG/CWSN admissions pla

Pakistan being mocked, again: Shehbaz Sharif’s ‘salute’ gesture to Trump goes viral

A video footage of Pakistani PM Shehbaz Sharif is going viral on social media, where he can be seen greeting US President Trump. The clip has drawn widespread a

From trash to Tejas: How your retired gadgets could become the backbone of Indian aviation

Your old smartphone is a geological anomaly. Know how India is turning e-waste black mass into aerospace-grade cobalt and lithium for jet engines and the missin

NASA targets march 6 to launch four astronauts to Moon on Artemis II mission

NASA has announced that it is targeting March 6 for the launch of its upcoming crewed lunar mission, following the successful completion of a critical wet dress

Fattah hypersonic specs revealed: Is Iran’s new glide vehicle a ‘carrier killer’ or psychological warfare?

Ayatollah Khamenei warned Iran can sink the USS Gerald R. Ford. From Fattah-1 hypersonic missiles to the Abu Mahdi cruise missile, explore the tech behind Tehra

Who is Neal Katyal? Indian-American lawyer in spotlight amid US SC’s ruling on Trump’s tariffs

US tariffs: Neal Katyal, who is a partner at Milbank LLP and the Paul Saunders Professor at Georgetown University Law Center, termed the Supreme Court's ruling

World’s smallest Island country: Just 21 sq km in area, only 10,000 people live here

World’s smallest Island country: The world’s smallest island country is Nauru, a tiny nation located in the central Pacific Ocean. It has a population of a

Trump’s ‘much ado about nothing’? From 50% to flat 10% — How court ruling brings change in US trade strategy

US tariffs: The US administration has imposed a 10 per cent ad valorem import duty on articles imported into the US. After the ruling, Trump announced in a pos
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img