India Offers $300B Clean Energy Investment Opportunity by 2030

Union Minister Pralhad Joshi announced India offers a $300 billion investment opportunity in clean energy sectors by 2030. He stated India has already achieved 50% of its installed electricity capacity from non-fossil fuels, five years ahead of its NDC target. The minister highlighted flagship programs like PM Surya Ghar and PM-KUSUM, which have benefited millions of households and farmers. He reaffirmed India's commitment to its 500 GW non-fossil capacity goal by 2030 and Net Zero by 2070, emphasizing a people-centric energy transition.

Key Points: India's $300B Clean Energy Investment Opportunity

  • $300B investment opportunity by 2030
  • 50% non-fossil power capacity achieved early
  • 500 GW non-fossil target by 2030
  • People-centric transition with flagship schemes
4 min read

India offers $300 billion investment opportunity in clean energy: Pralhad Joshi

Union Minister Pralhad Joshi announces a $300 billion investment opportunity in India's renewable energy sector by 2030, highlighting rapid capacity growth.

"India offers a $300 billion investment opportunity across renewable energy generation, storage, green hydrogen, grids and manufacturing by 2030. - Pralhad Joshi"

New Delhi, Jan 11

Union Minister for Renewable Energy Pralhad Joshi said on Sunday that India offers a $300 billion investment opportunity across renewable energy generation, storage, green hydrogen, grids and manufacturing by 2030.

Addressing the 16th Assembly of the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, the Union Minister added that with stable policies and transparent markets, India continues to remain one of the most attractive destinations for clean energy investment.

Calling for enhanced international cooperation, Union Minister Joshi stressed the importance of technology transfer, access to low-cost finance, capacity building and harmonisation of standards, particularly to support developing countries in scaling up renewable energy without compromising development aspirations.

Reaffirming India's strong support for IRENA, he said that India stands ready to share its experience, institutions and technical expertise and to work closely with all member countries, especially Least Developed Countries and Small Island Developing States, to accelerate the global renewable energy transition.

The Union Minister emphasised that India's energy transition is not only about capacity addition, but about people, opportunity and a shared sustainable future.

Addressing the Assembly, Union Minister Joshi said that India's approach to energy transition is guided by the principle of 'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam' -- One Earth, One Family, One Future, and a long-term vision anchored in equity, inclusivity and policy stability.

He reiterated India's commitment to achieving 500 GW of non-fossil fuel installed power capacity by 2030 and Net Zero emissions by 2070.

Highlighting a major milestone, Union Minister Joshi told that India has already achieved 50 per cent of its installed electricity capacity from non-fossil fuel sources in 2025, five years ahead of its Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) target under the Paris Agreement.

"India's renewable energy capacity has crossed 266 GW, placing the country among global leaders in renewable energy deployment."

The Union Minister underlined that as one of the world's fastest-growing major energy markets, India is prioritising reliable and resilient power systems through accelerated deployment of energy storage solutions, grid modernisation, development of Green Energy Corridors and innovative bidding mechanisms such as hybrid and round-the-clock renewable energy projects.

He also highlighted India's efforts to strengthen clean energy supply chains and expand domestic manufacturing across solar, wind, batteries and electrolysers, contributing to both national self-reliance and diversified global supply chains.

Emphasising the people-centric nature of India's energy transition, the Union Minister highlighted flagship programmes aimed at empowering households and farmers.

"Under the PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana, around 2.5 million households have benefitted from rooftop solar installations in less than two years, with a target to cover 10 million households by March 2027."

"Under the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthan Mahabhiyan (PM-KUSUM) scheme, about 2.17 million farmers have benefited through replacement of diesel pumps and solarisation of agricultural feeders."

Earlier, Union Minister Joshi participated in the high-level dialogue on "Reimagining Energy Futures: Bold Visions for Shared Prosperity" held on the sidelines of the Assembly.

He reaffirmed India's commitment to a people-centric energy transition, driven by strengthened international cooperation on finance, technology and governance, with the objective of delivering shared prosperity for all.

Emphasising that the energy transition must become a mass movement driven by equity and inclusion, the Union Minister said that India added nearly 50 GW of renewable energy capacity in 2025.

He congratulated the Dominican Republic on assuming the Presidency of IRENA and extended best wishes to the Vice-Presidents, Kenya, Solomon Islands, Spain, and Antigua and Barbuda, expressing confidence that their leadership will further strengthen multilateral cooperation and advance a sustainable and inclusive global energy transition.

The Union Minister also held a meeting with Amna bint Abdullah Al Dahak, Minister of Climate Change and Environment of the United Arab Emirates, to further strengthen India-UAE cooperation on climate action, clean energy and food security.

During the interaction, the two sides reviewed the expanding partnership in renewable energy, investment and innovation, anchored in multiple Memoranda of Understanding signed between 2014 and 2024 and aligned with the UAE's Net Zero 2050 goal.

The discussions focused on enhancing collaboration in renewables, decentralised energy solutions, manufacturing, energy storage, technology cooperation and blended finance, with an emphasis on people-centric, scalable initiatives to enhance energy security, resilience and long-term sustainability.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The focus on 'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam' is so important. India is showing true leadership by offering to share expertise with smaller nations. The farmer benefits through PM-KUSUM are often overlooked but crucial for rural India's development.
R
Rohit P
$300 billion is a huge number. My respectful criticism is that we need to ensure this investment actually reaches the ground level and doesn't just stay in big corporate projects. The benefits must be widespread and not create new monopolies.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in the sustainability sector, India's progress is impressive. The call for low-cost finance and tech transfer for developing countries is spot on. The world needs to cooperate, not compete, on this.
V
Vikram M
Great to see the emphasis on manufacturing and supply chains. Atmanirbhar Bharat in solar panels and batteries will reduce our import dependence and create lakhs of jobs. The UAE partnership is also strategically smart.
K
Karthik V
The 266 GW milestone is no small feat. But the real challenge is grid modernization and storage to handle this intermittent power. Hope the investment focuses on these critical areas too. The vision is there, execution is key.

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