India to tap augmented solar capacity, coal to weather El Nino, summer power demand


UPSC Study Note: India's Power Sector — Solar, Coal & El Niño (Summer 2026)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Peak demand (April 25, 2026) 256.1 GW
All-time peak (May 21, 2026) 270.8 GW
Thermal share on April 25 peak 66.9% (~173.3 GW)
Solar share on April 25 peak 21.5% (~58.2 GW)
Solar % of installed capacity ~30%
Solar % of actual generation Significantly lower (curtailed due to storage limits)
Coal India pithead stock (Mar 2026) ~125.54 MT (vs 106.78 MT on April 1, 2025)
Projected India power capacity (2035–36) 1,121 GW (CEA estimate)
El Niño intensification window May–July 2026
Primary statutory framework Electricity Act, 2003
Key ministry Ministry of Power + Ministry of New & Renewable Energy (MNRE)
Nodal agencies NLDC/POSOCO (grid operation), Coal India Ltd (CIL) (coal supply), CEA (planning)
India's 2030 NDC target 500 GW non-fossil installed capacity
CREA Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (independent think-tank cited by analysts)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Administrative / Governance

Geopolitical / Strategic

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. India's peak power demand on April 25, 2026 was 256.1 GW — a record at that date. [S1]
  2. The all-time peak power demand of 270.8 GW was recorded on May 21, 2026. [S3]
  3. On the April 25 peak, thermal plants contributed 66.9% of generation; solar contributed 21.5%. [S1]
  4. Solar energy's share in India's power generation on peak demand day: 5.63% (2022) → 8.9% (2025) → 21.5% (April 2026). [S1]
  5. Solar constitutes ~30% of India's installed power capacity but cannot be fully dispatched due to limited battery storage. [S1]
  6. Solar power is frequently curtailed in India to maintain grid stability. [S1]
  7. Coal India pithead stock: ~125.54 MT (March 2026), up from 106.78 MT (April 2025). [S4]
  8. El Niño is expected to intensify between May and July 2026, potentially weakening the Indian monsoon and reducing hydropower. [S2]
  9. India's NDC target: 500 GW non-fossil installed capacity by 2030. [S4]
  10. CEA's 20th Electric Power Survey projects India's total power capacity at 1,121 GW by 2035–36, with solar leading. [S5]
  11. The primary statutory framework for India's electricity sector is the Electricity Act, 2003. [S4]
  12. National Load Despatch Centre (NLDC/POSOCO) is the nodal body for real-time grid balancing in India. [S4]
  13. CREA (Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air) is an independent think-tank that tracks India's energy and climate data. [S1]
  14. On May 24, 2026, India's peak demand of 247.9 GW occurred at 10:36 PM — a non-solar hour — highlighting the evening demand gap. [S3]
  15. Implementing ministry for renewables: Ministry of New & Renewable Energy (MNRE); for grid/coal: Ministry of Power / Ministry of Coal. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): - GS-III: Infrastructure — Energy, Environment and Disaster Management; Growth and Development; Science & Technology - GS-I (Geography): El Niño and its effects on Indian monsoon

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: "Infrastructure: Energy — electricity, non-conventional energy resources"; "Environment and ecology — Climate change"; "Disaster and disaster management" - GS-I: "Important Geophysical phenomena such as El Niño, La Niña"

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "India's solar installed capacity stands at 30% of total power capacity, yet solar's contribution to actual generation remains disproportionately low. Analyse the structural, technological, and policy constraints responsible for this gap and suggest a roadmap to bridge it." (GS-III) 2. "El Niño poses a compound risk to India's energy security — examine how atmospheric anomalies interact with electricity demand, hydropower generation, and coal supply chains." (GS-III / GS-I) 3. "India's energy transition requires managing the 'thermal trap' — the continued dependence on coal even as renewable capacity grows. Critically evaluate this tension in the context of India's NDC commitments." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Solar Mission / PM-KUSUM / PLI for Solar Policy architecture driving India's solar capacity addition
Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) & Green Hydrogen Technology solutions to India's solar curtailment problem
El Niño and Indian Monsoon Direct causal link to demand surge, hydro shortfall
India's NDC & COP commitments Normative framework for the coal-to-solar transition
Electricity Act 2003 & proposed amendments Statutory backbone of the sector; reforms in cross-subsidy, DISCOM restructuring
Coal India Ltd — production, logistics, stock policy Supply-side reliability for thermal generation during peak demand
Pumped Storage Hydro (PSH) Key storage solution being promoted to firm up renewable output
DISCOM reforms (RDSS scheme) Transmission/distribution upgrades critical for solar despatch

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing installed capacity with actual generation: Solar is ~30% of installed capacity but contributed only 21.5% on the peak demand day — and far less historically. Do not equate the two. [S1]
  2. Misattributing El Niño to Indian Ocean: El Niño is a Pacific Ocean sea-surface warming event; its Indian Ocean counterpart is the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD). These are distinct phenomena with overlapping but different effects on Indian rainfall.
  3. Wrong ministry for solar vs. power sector: MNRE handles renewable energy policy; Ministry of Power handles overall electricity regulation, grid operations, and thermal; Ministry of Coal handles coal supply. Many aspirants conflate these.
  4. Curtailment confusion: Solar curtailment (intentionally reducing output) is not the same as a supply shortage. India curtails solar despite having capacity, to prevent grid instability — a counterintuitive but important distinction. [S1]
  5. Assuming El Niño always causes drought: El Niño typically suppresses Indian summer monsoon rainfall but does not guarantee drought every year; spatial variation is significant. The 2023 El Niño had uneven impact across Indian states.

11. Sources


Sources: - India ready for peak power demand, but supply, transmission risks remain - Power Supply, Peak Demand and Availability of Coal — PIB - Power Demand Tracker — Down to Earth - India's Power Capacity to Double by 2035–36 — Down to Earth - India's Record 256 GW Power Peak Explained — Down to Earth