India is now at a clean energy inflection point

The world today is increasingly getting split into two kinds of countries. The first group, which features the US, among others, has abundant oil and gas and is happy to continue with that energy model. The second group, which features India, does not. So, for us, clean energy is not just about climate — it is about affordability, resilience, and security. That is why the clean energy transition matters so profoundly here.

For two centuries, industrialisation everywhere was powered by fossil fuels. India is now taking a different path — industrialising on the back of cheap solar power and batteries instead of fossil fuels.

And yet, this is not fully and widely appreciated. Let us consider income-level comparisons to get some perspective. In 2012, at per capita income levels mirroring India’s current levels, China had almost no solar, and its coal demand kept rising. India, in 2025, used one-fourth of the coal per person that China used and is now approaching a coal-generation peak, with rapid deployment of renewables. When China crossed the 1,500 kWh per capita consumption benchmark, coal was cheaper than solar; today, in India, solar-plus-storage costs about half as much as new coal. The economics have flipped decisively.

Electrification reinforces this shift. Electricity now accounts for nearly 20% of India’s final energy use, matching China at similar income levels. And as the share of the economy running on electricity grows, a cleaner grid helps the whole country lower its emissions and become healthier and cheaper to run.

Three transformations are now converging:

From deployment of renewables to building a system around them: It’s no longer just about setting up solar and wind plants. It is about ensuring we can actually use all that clean energy — by storing it, carrying it across strong transmission lines, and balancing supply and demand when the weather changes. This shift from addition to integration is a priority for the next few years for renewables to acquire real scale.

From an RE deployment superpower to a clean energy manufacturing superpower: India’s electronics industry has grown nearly six times in a decade, to $130 billion, enabling spillovers into solar, batteries, and electric vehicles (EVs). Solar module manufacturing has reached 120 GW, and solar cell production nearly 18 GW, enough for India to compete globally. We are preparing not just to deploy clean tech, but to sell it to the world.

From clean electricity for the power sector to clean energy for the whole economy: We’ve cleaned up electricity to some extent, but now we must clean up everything else — steel, cement, and chemical factories, etc. Doing so reduces oil and coal imports, strengthens self-reliance, and keeps Indian exports competitive. Increasingly, climate policy is becoming trade policy. To keep exporting a wide range of industrial goods, India must be ready.

This industrial moment aligns with a favourable trade environment. The India–EU trade agreement offers more than mere tariff cuts — it offers market access at scale, consistent regulations, and a huge opportunity for MSMEs and manufacturing clusters to integrate into global value chains. It is also a strategic move. Europe wants clean, diversified supply chains and is increasingly hesitant to rely on China. India brings scale, manufacturing capability, and one of the world’s fastest-growing clean-energy markets.

The India-US interim deal strengthens this further. Under this, the US lowers tariffs on Indian goods relative to competitors such as China and Vietnam, giving India a significant advantage just as America is rapidly expanding its electricity grids and energy production to meet the soaring demand from data centres and new manufacturing investments. This opens a massive opportunity for India to supply power electronics, grid hardware, transformers, and EV-related technologies — areas where our strengths are rising.

Together, these trade deals expand India’s export runway. But they won’t deliver outcomes automatically; they will reward us only if we can manufacture at scale, meet standards, and innovate fast. Our clean energy manufacturing ecosystem is scaling, but has some distance to go before we can truly turn it into a competitive advantage.

The budget for the coming fiscal year helps build on this momentum. The push to carbon capture, utilisation and storage, power storage, green hydrogen and cleaner transmission underlines the recognition that India’s competitiveness will depend on decarbonising not just electricity but the industries that shape the real economy.

If India gets this right, it will build jobs, exports, and strategic resilience — using trade partnerships to scale manufacturing, using innovation to move up the value chain, and using clean electricity to keep growth affordable. The inflection point is here. The next phase is execution.

Sumant Sinha is founder, chairman, and CEO, ReNew. The views expressed are personal

Latest

UP’s expressway battle: Yogi draws a longer line than Akhilesh’s

The Ganga Expressway has redrawn the contest over expressway credit in Uttar Pradesh. Its scale, reach and economic promise have strengthened Yogi Adityanath's

Earth is Our Only Home

People believe that their life will be wonderful if the stock market soars. No, our life will be wonderful if we eat nutritious food, drink clean water and brea

The quiet republic: In defence of the policeman in an election season

An IPS probationer argues that police bear the hidden burden of keeping Indian elections peaceful. The piece says their restraint, neutrality and planning uphol

America right now is a failed state, well almost

Donald Trump News: Economic might and robust internal security aside, Trump's America ticks enough boxes to qualify as a failed state in the political theatre o

Why the Iran conflict is taking a more dangerous turn

Stalled talks, ship seizures and nuclear disputes sharpen the Trump-Iran standoff

Topics

Quote of the day by Issac Newton: What we know is a drop; what we do not know is an …..

Isaac Newton's quote on knowledge is framed as a lens for students awaiting board results. It shifts attention from marks alone to curiosity, doubt and learning

What Iran offered Trump: Hormuz reopens if US lifts blockade, nuclear talks later

Trump, who has repeatedly insisted that Iran must never obtain a nuclear weapon, said on Friday he was dissatisfied with the latest proposal. Iran’s foreign m

CEO Greg Abel moves to assure Berkshire shareholders in a post-Buffett world, with record cash

BERKSHIRE-AGM/ (WRAPUP 7, PIX):WRAPUP 7-CEO Greg Abel moves to assure Berkshire shareholders in a post-Buffett world, with record cash

Jamie Overton fiery pace breaks Tilak Varma’s fitness band at Chepauk

Jamie Overton's searing pace had a painful consequence for Tilak Varma at Chepauk on Saturday, as a thunderous delivery snapped the Mumbai batter's fitness band

Berkshire Meeting Highlights Tough Balancing Act for Greg Abel

Greg Abel didn’t take long to address the elephant in the room.

Israel strikes south Lebanon, 7 killed as ceasefire violations continue

Israeli strikes hit southern Lebanon and troops demolished parts of a Catholic convent in Yaroun. The incident drew a fresh church denial of Israel's Hezbollah

First full Moon of May rises like a blooming flower in stunning sky show

A video of May's Flower Moon rising behind Whaleback Light near New Castle has gone viral on X. The clip has renewed interest in the full moon's seasonal name a

IPL 2026: KKR bowling coach Tim Southee keeps mum on Matheesha Pathirana’s participation against SRH: ‘We’ll look at…’

Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) pacer Matheesha Pathirana has not played for the franchise despite being available for the last two matches.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img