‘CIL spent ₹961 crore in ongoing fiscal year as capex on solar’


CIL's Solar Capex — UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Company Coal India Limited (CIL)
Headquarters Kolkata, West Bengal
Ministry Ministry of Coal, Government of India
Parent category Central Public Sector Enterprise (CPSE)
FY26 solar capex (Apr–Jan 2026) ₹961 crore
FY25 comparable period capex ₹412 crore
YoY growth ~133% (more than doubled)
Progressive target (till Jan 2026) ₹729 crore
Target achievement 132%
Full-year FY26 solar capex target ₹957 crore (surpassed before year-end)
CIL's RE capacity target 3 GW by FY 2028
Coal sector CPSE RE target 7,281 MW by 2027; >9 GW by 2030
Key JV CIL Rajasthan Akshay Urja Ltd (74% CIL, 26% Rajasthan Urja Vikas Nigam Ltd) — incorporated June 9, 2025
First solar deal 100 MW to GUVNL (Gujarat)
RRVUNL solar park JV 1,190 MW
Proposed SPV (dissolved) CIL Solar PV Ltd (4 GW PV manufacturing)
India's total solar capacity (2026) ~150 GW
India's 2030 non-fossil target 500 GW

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Geopolitical / Strategic

Scientific / Technological

Administrative / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. CIL's solar capex in FY 2026 (Apr–Jan): ₹961 crore — more than double the ₹412 crore in the comparable prior-year period. [S4]
  2. CIL's solar capex achievement against the progressive target (till Jan 2026) was 132% of the ₹729 crore target. [S4]
  3. The full-year FY 2026 solar capex target for CIL was ₹957 crore — surpassed before fiscal year-end. [S4]
  4. CIL's renewable energy capacity target: 3 GW by FY 2028. [S4]
  5. Coal sector CPSEs' combined RE target: 7,281 MW by 2027 (Ministry of Coal directive). [S1]
  6. Coal sector aims to surpass 9 GW of renewable capacity by 2030. [S2]
  7. CIL's maiden solar power deal: 100 MW supply agreement with GUVNL (Gujarat). [S1]
  8. CIL–RRVUNL JV: 1,190 MW solar park in Rajasthan. [S1]
  9. CIL Rajasthan Akshay Urja Limited incorporated on June 9, 2025 — CIL holds 74% stake; partner is Rajasthan Urja Vikas Nigam Limited. [S3]
  10. CIL Solar PV Limited was a proposed SPV for 4 GW PV manufacturing — subsequently dissolved. [S3]
  11. CIL is headquartered in Kolkata and operates under the Ministry of Coal. [S4]
  12. Combined solar+wind installed capacity of coal-sector CPSEs (CIL, NLCIL, SCCL) before the current expansion: ~1,751 MW (1,700 MW solar + 51 MW wind). [S1]
  13. India ranked 3rd globally in renewable energy installed capacity (as of 2026). [S2]
  14. India's solar capacity reached ~150 GW by April 2026, with 36.6 GW added in 2025 alone. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III (Energy, Infrastructure, Economy) Specific syllabus headings: - Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways - Indian Economy: Growth, Development, Employment - Conservation, Environmental Pollution, Degradation, Environmental Impact Assessment (energy transition angle)

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Coal India's foray into solar energy represents both an opportunity and a structural challenge for India's energy transition. Critically examine." (GS-III) 2. "Evaluate the role of Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) in accelerating India's renewable energy capacity addition, with reference to the coal sector's diversification strategy." (GS-III) 3. "The concept of 'just transition' in the energy sector raises questions of equity and industrial policy. Discuss, with specific reference to coal-mining communities in India." (GS-III / GS-II overlap)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Solar Mission (NSM) CIL's targets nest within NSM's 100 GW goal and India's 500 GW non-fossil 2030 target
Just Energy Transition (JET) / JET-P for India Coal workers' livelihood security as CIL shifts to solar; global financing frameworks
NLCIL (NLC India Limited) RE expansion Peer CPSE also diversifying; 300 MW solar tenders awarded to Tata Power for Rajasthan
PM-KUSUM Scheme Solar deployment on agricultural/wasteland — overlaps with CIL's de-coaled land solar strategy
India's NDCs and Net-Zero 2070 commitment CIL's RE pivot is a direct enabler of India's climate commitments
Electricity Act 2003 and Green Energy Open Access Rules 2022 Legal framework enabling CPSEs to sell solar power directly to states/DISCOMs
Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) Policy Next step after solar — CIL may need storage for intermittency management
Coal-bearing areas land use policy De-coaled land repurposing for solar — policy, legal, and environmental dimensions

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Ministry confusion: CIL falls under Ministry of Coal — not Ministry of Power or Ministry of New & Renewable Energy (MNRE). Solar targets for CIL are set by MoCoal, not MNRE.
  2. Target confusion: CIL's RE target is 3 GW by FY 2028 — do not confuse with the coal sector CPSE aggregate target of 7,281 MW by 2027 or 9 GW+ by 2030.
  3. CIL Solar PV Ltd status: This SPV for 4 GW PV manufacturing has been dissolved — do not cite it as an active project.
  4. Capex vs. installed capacity: ₹961 crore is the capital expenditure incurred, not the installed capacity added. CIL's installed RE capacity is a separate (smaller) figure.
  5. GUVNL vs. RRVUNL confusion: The 100 MW maiden deal is with GUVNL (Gujarat); the 1,190 MW solar park JV is with RRVUNL (Rajasthan) — exam questions may swap these.
  6. Year confusion: The ₹961 crore figure is for FY 2025–26 (Apr 2025 – Jan 2026), not FY 2024–25 (when ₹412 crore was spent in the comparable period).

11. Sources