Solar industry’s wish list for Union Budget


UPSC Study Note: Solar Industry's Wish List for Union Budget


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2010 Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (JNNSM) launched under National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC); initial target 20 GW by 2022.
2015 Target revised to 100 GW by 2022; solar designated a priority renewable sector.
2019 PM-KUSUM (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan) launched to solarise agriculture pumps and add decentralised generation.
2021 PLI for Solar PV Modules (Tranche I) approved — ₹4,500 crore. [S2]
2022 PLI Tranche II approved — ₹19,500 crore; total PLI outlay reaches ₹24,000 crore. [S2]
2024 PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana launched — ₹75,021 crore outlay for 1 crore rooftop solar households by FY 2026-27. [S3]
Oct 2025 Installed solar capacity: 129.92 GW. [S1]
Jan 2026 Industry pre-Budget memoranda demand PLI for ingots, PM-KUSUM-II and VGF for storage. [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Key Schemes

Scheme Ministry Outlay Target
PLI for Solar PV (Tranche I + II) MNRE ₹24,000 crore 48,337 MW manufacturing capacity [S2]
PM-KUSUM MNRE ~₹34,035 crore (central support) Solarise 35 lakh agriculture pumps; 10,000 MW decentralised solar
PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana MNRE ₹75,021 crore 1 crore rooftop households by FY 2026-27 [S3]

PM-KUSUM Components (as of Nov 2025) [S2]

PLI Performance (June 2025) [S2]

Installed Capacity

Key Bodies Cited

Regulatory Framework


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Administrative / Federal

Scientific / Technological

Geopolitical / Strategic

Social


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's installed solar capacity as of October 2025: 129.92 GW (second-largest by installed capacity in India's power mix). [S1]
  2. Solar growth since 2014: from 3 GW to 129.92 GW — approximately 43-fold increase. [S1]
  3. PLI for Solar PV Modules total outlay: ₹24,000 crore (Tranche I: ₹4,500 crore, April 2021; Tranche II: ₹19,500 crore, September 2022). [S2]
  4. PLI Solar Letters of Award issued for 48,337 MW of manufacturing capacity. [S2]
  5. PM-KUSUM full form: Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan; implementing ministry: MNRE. [S2]
  6. PM-KUSUM Component B (standalone solar pumps installed as of Nov 2025): 9.42 lakh. [S2]
  7. PM-KUSUM Component C (grid-connected pump solarisation): 10.99 lakh. [S2]
  8. PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana outlay: ₹75,021 crore; target: 1 crore rooftop households by FY 2026-27. [S3]
  9. NSEFA = National Solar Energy Federation of India; SESI = Solar Energy Society of India. [S4]
  10. The three budget demands of the solar industry (Jan 2026): (i) PLI for ingots, (ii) PM-KUSUM second instalment, (iii) VGF for energy storage. [S4]
  11. Solar PV value chain (upstream to downstream): Polysilicon → Ingot → Wafer → Cell → Module — PLI extended to modules/cells but NOT yet to ingots. [S4]
  12. ALMM (Approved List of Models and Manufacturers) — mandatory for solar modules in government-funded projects; administered by MNRE.
  13. India's NDC renewable target: 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030; net-zero target: 2070.
  14. PLI Solar investment attracted as of June 2025: ₹48,120 crore; jobs: ~38,500. [S2]
  15. 2025 saw highest single-year renewable addition in India's history. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: Primarily GS-III (Indian Economy — Infrastructure, Energy; Government Budgeting; Science & Technology — indigenisation) Also touches GS-II (Government Schemes, Welfare).

Syllabus headings: - Infrastructure: Energy — renewable energy, storage, grid integration - Government Budgeting — PLI, VGF, subsidy rationalisation - Science & Technology — indigenisation, manufacturing ecosystem

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's solar sector has grown rapidly, yet remains import-dependent at the upstream end of the value chain. Critically examine the role of the PLI scheme and the budget measures needed to build a fully indigenous solar manufacturing ecosystem." (GS-III) 2. "Discuss how Viability Gap Funding (VGF) for energy storage can transform India's solar energy landscape. What are the fiscal and governance challenges in its implementation?" (GS-III) 3. "PM-KUSUM has been hailed as a scheme that can simultaneously address farmer distress and clean energy goals. Evaluate its performance and suggest measures to accelerate uptake." (GS-II/III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) JNNSM (solar's origin) is one of NAPCC's eight missions
Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme Solar PLI is one of 14 PLI sectors; understanding design and evaluation matters
Renewable Purchase Obligation (RPO) Mandates that drive demand for solar power from DISCOMs
Energy Storage (BESS & Pumped Hydro) Directly linked to VGF demand; addresses solar intermittency
India's NDCs and COP commitments Solar expansion is central to India's climate diplomacy and Paris pledges
ALMM and BIS standards Regulatory quality framework for domestic solar manufacturing
Green Hydrogen Mission Solar is primary energy input for green hydrogen; cross-sector linkage
Electricity Act 2003 & 2022 Amendment Statutory backbone for renewable tariffs, RPO, and DISCOM reform

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: Solar schemes (PLI, PM-KUSUM, PM Surya Ghar) are implemented by MNRE, not the Ministry of Power (MoP) — though grid/storage involves MoP too.
  2. PLI coverage error: Current PLI covers modules and cells — NOT ingots or wafers. The Jan 2026 budget demand is specifically for extending PLI upstream to ingots; do not conflate with existing PLI.
  3. PM-KUSUM components: Three components serve different purposes — Component A (decentralised plants/feeders), B (standalone pumps), C (grid-connected pump solarisation) — they are frequently mixed up.
  4. Capacity figure trap: "Second-largest installed capacity" refers to solar's position in India's power mix (second after thermal), NOT India's global ranking (third globally after China and USA).
  5. VGF ≠ Subsidy: Viability Gap Funding is a one-time capital grant to make commercially unviable but socially/strategically desirable projects viable — distinct from ongoing subsidies or PLI incentives. Examiners test this definitional precision.

11. Sources


Note: WebFetch was disabled per retrieval budget constraints; all web facts grounded in search-result snippets from pib.gov.in (Tier 1) and the user-supplied article (Tier 4).