‘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
- Coal India Limited (CIL), India's largest state-owned coal mining company (HQ: Kolkata), is diversifying into solar and renewable energy as part of a strategic pivot away from pure fossil-fuel dependence. [S1]
- In FY 2025–26 (April 2025 – January 2026), CIL spent ₹961 crore as capital expenditure (capex) on solar projects — a 132% achievement against the progressive target of ₹729 crore for that period. [S4]
- This figure also surpassed the full-year FY 2026 solar capex target of ₹957 crore before the fiscal year ended. [S4]
- Directly relevant to UPSC GS-III (Energy, Economy) and contemporary debates on just energy transition and PSU diversification. [S1][S2]
2. Why in the News
- February 17, 2026: CIL officially disclosed that its solar capex for FY 2026 (Apr–Jan) reached ₹961 crore, more than doubling from ₹412 crore in the comparable period of FY 2025 — a 132% growth. [S4]
- This announcement situates CIL's renewable foray within India's larger push toward 500 GW non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030 committed at COP26. [S2]
- Broader context: India's solar capacity reached ~150 GW by April 2026, adding a record 36.6 GW in 2025 alone. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- 2018: CIL first articulated a 20 GW solar power generation goal as part of its long-term diversification. [S5]
- Pre-2023: CIL and other coal-sector CPSEs (NLCIL, SCCL) had a combined installed RE capacity of ~1,700 MW (solar) + 51 MW (wind). [S1]
- 2023: Ministry of Coal directed all coal CPSEs to accelerate RE adoption — rooftop solar on government buildings, solar parks on de-coaled lands. [S1]
- Target set: Coal sector CPSEs mandated to achieve 7,281 MW RE capacity by 2027, and over 9 GW by 2030. [S1][S2]
- CIL's maiden solar venture: 100 MW supply agreement signed with GUVNL (Gujarat Urja Vikas Nigam Limited). [S1]
- JV with RRVUNL: CIL entered a joint venture with Rajasthan Rajya Vidyut Utpadan Nigam Limited (RRVUNL) for a 1,190 MW solar park. [S1]
- June 9, 2025: CIL incorporated CIL Rajasthan Akshay Urja Limited as a renewable energy JV with Rajasthan Urja Vikas Nigam Limited — CIL holds 74% stake. [S3]
- CIL Solar PV Limited: Established as a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) for a proposed 4 GW solar PV manufacturing facility — subsequently dissolved, indicating a strategic pivot toward partnership-led models. [S3]
- FY 2026: CIL solar capex of ₹961 crore surpasses the full-year target of ₹957 crore by January 2026 itself. [S4]
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
- CIL's solar capex doubling signals serious capital reallocation from a company whose revenues are primarily coal-derived; reduces long-term stranded-asset risk. [S4]
- Participation in solar auctions diversifies CIL's revenue streams and shields it from coal-demand volatility as India's energy mix shifts. [S4]
- Coal sector CPSEs targeting 9+ GW by 2030 could mobilise tens of thousands of crores in green capex, creating construction and O&M employment. [S2]
Environmental
- Solar investments on de-coaled lands (mined-out areas) represent productive post-mining land use — reduces land-use conflict and ecological liability. [S1]
- CIL's RE pivot aligns with India's Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the Paris Agreement — 500 GW non-fossil by 2030 and net-zero by 2070. [S2]
- Reduces Scope 2 emissions from CIL's own operations where captive solar replaces grid electricity.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Just Transition framing: coal-sector PSUs transitioning to renewables prevents stranded workers/communities, reducing social friction — a model watched globally at COP summits. [S2]
- India's renewable credibility (ranked 3rd globally in RE installed capacity) is bolstered by large PSUs leading from the front. [S2]
Scientific / Technological
- Proposed 4 GW CIL Solar PV manufacturing SPV (since dissolved) aimed at upstream integration — signalled ambition to control the solar value chain, not just generation. [S3]
- Shift to partnership-led JV model (e.g., CIL Rajasthan Akshay Urja Ltd) reflects lessons learned: manufacturing is capital/technology-intensive; better to partner with state DISCOMs/RNRE bodies. [S3]
Administrative / Governance
- CIL's 132% capex target achievement in solar is a rare instance of PSU over-performance against annual financial targets — relevant for governance case studies.
- Ministry of Coal's directive-led push (mandating rooftop solar on all government buildings, solar parks on de-coaled lands) demonstrates Centre-directed sectoral decarbonisation. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- June 9, 2025: Incorporation of CIL Rajasthan Akshay Urja Limited — CIL (74%) + Rajasthan Urja Vikas Nigam Limited JV for large-scale solar development. [S3]
- 2025: CIL Solar PV Limited dissolved — strategic retreat from 4 GW manufacturing ambition; pivot to asset-light JV model. [S3]
- January 2026: CIL solar capex crosses ₹961 crore, surpassing full-year FY26 target of ₹957 crore with ~2 months still remaining in the fiscal year. [S4]
- February 17, 2026: CIL officially announced the capex milestone; senior executive confirmed active participation in solar auctions. [S4]
- 2025 (calendar year): India added record 36.6 GW of solar capacity; Q1 2026 added 14,450 MW — context within which CIL is scaling. [S3]
- India's total solar installed capacity reached ~150 GW by April 2026, with renewables accounting for ~42% of total power mix. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- CIL's solar capex in FY 2026 (Apr–Jan): ₹961 crore — more than double the ₹412 crore in the comparable prior-year period. [S4]
- CIL's solar capex achievement against the progressive target (till Jan 2026) was 132% of the ₹729 crore target. [S4]
- The full-year FY 2026 solar capex target for CIL was ₹957 crore — surpassed before fiscal year-end. [S4]
- CIL's renewable energy capacity target: 3 GW by FY 2028. [S4]
- Coal sector CPSEs' combined RE target: 7,281 MW by 2027 (Ministry of Coal directive). [S1]
- Coal sector aims to surpass 9 GW of renewable capacity by 2030. [S2]
- CIL's maiden solar power deal: 100 MW supply agreement with GUVNL (Gujarat). [S1]
- CIL–RRVUNL JV: 1,190 MW solar park in Rajasthan. [S1]
- CIL Rajasthan Akshay Urja Limited incorporated on June 9, 2025 — CIL holds 74% stake; partner is Rajasthan Urja Vikas Nigam Limited. [S3]
- CIL Solar PV Limited was a proposed SPV for 4 GW PV manufacturing — subsequently dissolved. [S3]
- CIL is headquartered in Kolkata and operates under the Ministry of Coal. [S4]
- 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]
- India ranked 3rd globally in renewable energy installed capacity (as of 2026). [S2]
- 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
- 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.
- 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.
- CIL Solar PV Ltd status: This SPV for 4 GW PV manufacturing has been dissolved — do not cite it as an active project.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] Coal Sector Renewable Energy & Ministry of Coal CPSE Directives — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1945466 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Coal Sector Aims to Ramp up Renewable Energy Capacity to Over 9 GW by 2030 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2013673 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] India Renewable Transition / CIL JV & CIL Solar PV dissolution — https://powerpeakdigest.com/coal-india-cil-solar-pv-dissolution/ — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S4] 'CIL spent ₹961 crore in ongoing fiscal year as capex on solar' — The Hindu, February 17, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-17/th_international/articleG7CFJJJ6R-13546794.ece — (Tier 4, primary article)
- [S5] CIL 20 GW Solar Goal (2018 baseline) — https://www.pressreader.com/india/the-free-press-journal/20180402/282716227555199 — (reference)