India’s cheapest power is here, the grid must catch up

I have sufficient grounded facts. Composing the study note now.


Study Note: India's Cheapest Power Is Here — The Grid Must Catch Up

UPSC Prelims + Mains | GS-III: Energy, Infrastructure, Environment


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2015 India pledges 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030 under NDC (updated at COP26)
2015–16 Green Energy Corridors (Phase I) launched to evacuate renewable power from resource-rich states
2022 Government declares plan for 50 GW/year renewable addition for 5 years [S5]
2022 India achieves NDC target of 40% non-fossil installed capacity (157.32 GW) — 9 years early [S6]
2024 National Electricity Plan (Transmission) launched: ₹2.44 lakh crore plan for 500 GW integration [S7]
2025 India ranks 3rd globally in renewable installed capacity [S8]
June 2025 50% non-fossil milestone crossed — 5 years ahead of schedule [S4]
March 2026 Solar alone at 150.26 GW; total renewables at 253.96 GW [S3]

4. Core Static Facts

Installed Capacity (as of March 2026): - Total non-fossil: 283.46 GW [S4] - Solar: 150.26 GW (up 41% YoY from 94.17 GW in Nov 2024) [S3] - Wind: >56 GW (India ranked 4th globally in wind turbine capacity) [S3] - Total renewables (excl. large hydro): ~253.96 GW [S3] - Total power capacity: 5.05 lakh MW (505 GW) [S9]

Targets: - 500 GW non-fossil by 2030 (NDC commitment) [S5] - 2,000 GW by 2050 (estimated need for full electrification of industry + transport) [S1]

Transmission Plan (National Electricity Plan – Transmission, 2024): [S7] - Cost: ₹2.44 lakh crore - HVDC corridors: 8,120 circuit km - 765 kV AC lines: 25,960 circuit km - 400 kV lines: 15,758 circuit km - Inter-regional capacity: to rise from 1.12 lakh MW → 1.50 lakh MW by 2030

Key Policy Instruments: - ISTS (Inter-State Transmission System) charge waiver for solar/wind projects commissioned by June 30, 2025 [S3] - POWERGRID equity limit raised from ₹5,000 cr → ₹7,500 cr per subsidiary for large capital-intensive projects [S3] - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Power (transmission); Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) (generation) - Enabling framework: Electricity Act, 2003; National Electricity Policy

Cost Benchmark: - Firm clean power (solar/wind + battery): ~₹3.5/kWh [S1] - Stranded capacity (transmission-constrained): >50 GW [S1]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Administrative / Governance

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's total non-fossil installed power capacity as of March 31, 2026: 283.46 GW. [S4]
  2. Solar installed capacity as of March 2026: 150.26 GW — India ranks 3rd globally in total renewables. [S3][S8]
  3. India added >45 GW of renewables in 2025 — the highest-ever single-year addition. [S2]
  4. On July 29, 2025, renewables met 51.5% of India's total electricity demand — a record. [S3]
  5. India's 50% non-fossil installed capacity milestone was achieved in June 2025 — five years ahead of the 2030 NDC target. [S3]
  6. Firm clean power (solar + wind + battery storage) now costs approximately ₹3.5 per kWh in India. [S1]
  7. More than 50 GW of clean capacity is stranded in India due to transmission lag. [S1]
  8. Transmission projects take 3–5 years to build; generation projects take 12–18 months. [S1]
  9. The National Electricity Plan (Transmission) envisions ₹2.44 lakh crore investment for 500 GW integration by 2030. [S7]
  10. The plan includes 8,120 circuit km of HVDC lines and 25,960 circuit km of 765 kV AC lines. [S7]
  11. Inter-regional transmission capacity is targeted to rise from 1.12 lakh MW to 1.50 lakh MW by 2030. [S7]
  12. ISTS charges waived for solar/wind projects commissioned by June 30, 2025. [S3]
  13. India is ranked 4th globally in installed wind turbine capacity. [S3]
  14. India needs an estimated 2,000 GW of renewables by 2050 to meet full electrification of industry and transport. [S1]
  15. Advancing grid optimisation + storage at key nodes can unlock 1,000 GW of new clean energy without additional land for transmission. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-III: Energy, Infrastructure, Science & Technology, Environment & Climate Change - "Infrastructure: Energy, Ports, Roads, Airports, Railways etc." - "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment" - "Achievements of Indians in science & technology; indigenization of technology and developing new technology"

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Transmission infrastructure has emerged as the single biggest bottleneck in India's renewable energy transition. Critically examine the structural causes and suggest a policy framework to resolve the mismatch between generation and evacuation capacity." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "India has achieved 50% non-fossil installed capacity five years ahead of schedule, yet millions remain energy insecure. Analyse the paradox and suggest measures for equitable energy access." (GS-III, 15 marks) 3. "Evaluate the role of HVDC technology and grid-scale battery storage in transforming India's electricity grid for a 2,000 GW renewable future." (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Electricity Plan 2022–32 Master blueprint within which grid + generation targets are set
Green Hydrogen Mission Depends on surplus cheap renewable power for electrolysis — directly linked to grid expansion
PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana Rooftop solar scheme that adds distributed generation stress on distribution grids
FAME India / EV Policy Vehicle electrification is a key demand driver for the projected 2,000 GW by 2050
India's NDCs & COP commitments Renewable targets are treaty-bound; grid failure = NDC failure
DISCOM reforms (UDAY, Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme) Weak DISCOMs are the last-mile choke point — financially unviable utilities can't absorb new renewable supply
Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) Policy Storage is the "firm power" enabler at ₹3.5/kWh — PLI scheme, Viability Gap Funding
Land Acquisition Act & Right of Way issues Root cause of 3–5 year transmission delays

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. MNRE vs. Ministry of Power confusion: MNRE handles renewable generation policy; the Ministry of Power governs transmission infrastructure, grid codes, and the National Electricity Plan. Do not conflate them.
  2. 500 GW target is non-fossil, not just renewables: The 500 GW by 2030 target includes large hydro and nuclear — not only solar and wind. Total renewables (excl. large hydro) target is different.
  3. India "3rd in renewables" but "4th in wind": India ranks 3rd overall in renewable installed capacity but specifically 4th in wind turbine capacity. These are different rankings — a common trap.
  4. ISTS waiver deadline: The ISTS charge waiver was for projects commissioned by June 30, 2025 — aspirants may confuse this with the 2030 overall target date.
  5. "Cheapest power" ≠ "cheapest delivered power": Solar/wind are the cheapest at the generation level (~₹2–3/unit at project), but firm deliverable power (with storage) is ~₹3.5/kWh. Confusion between levelised cost of generation and firm supply cost is a common error in essay/Mains answers.

11. Sources