India's BESS demand to reach 236.2 GWh by FY32 on falling battery costs, rising clean energy needs: Report
New Delhi, June 30
India's Battery Energy Storage System demand is expected to reach 236.2 GWh during FY27-FY32, driven by declining battery costs and improving revenue visibility from Firm and Dispatchable Renewable Energy, Round-the-Clock and ancillary services, according to an Equirus report.
The report said, "Declining battery costs and greater revenue visibility from FDRE, RTC and ancillary services have enhanced commercial viability."
It said the growth of AI and cloud data centres is emerging as a key demand driver, as these facilities require uninterrupted clean power.
"Each 100 MW data centre needs ~250 MW Solar + 150MW wind + ~450 MWh BESS to run 24x7 on renewables," the report said.
The report added, "BESS enables time-shifting, not generation -- needs extra solar input."
According to the report, India's solar project pipeline remains strong, with stable execution and demand expected over the coming years. However, the standalone solar segment is facing a supply overhang, with around 58 GW of unsigned solar power purchase agreements (PPAs). Most of these are plain-vanilla projects that DISCOMs are reluctant to contract because of lower tariff attractiveness and weak offtake visibility, making financial closure difficult.
The report said DISCOMs are increasingly preferring firm and dispatchable renewable power, including battery-backed solar (BESS), FDRE and RTC projects that can supply electricity beyond solar generation hours.
It further said, "Government tenders, storage obligations and SECI/NTPC-led procurement programs have accelerated utility-scale BESS adoption."
The report also noted that the government is considering incentives for floating solar projects to ensure renewable energy capacity is more evenly distributed across the country instead of being concentrated in a few states.
Citing NITI Aayog, the report said India may require around 1,800 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2050, along with nearly 2,000 GWh of Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS).
— ANI
Reader Comments
Interesting that AI data centres are driving demand—each 100 MW needing ~450 MWh BESS! That's huge. But with our power grid still struggling in rural areas, hope this doesn't just benefit big tech while villages face outages. Also, 58 GW unsigned solar PPAs shows DISCOMs need more incentives.
As someone working in renewables in India, the falling battery costs are real—lithium-ion prices have dropped ~50% since 2020. But 2,000 GWh by 2050? That's a massive scale-up. Also, floating solar incentives could help states like Kerala and Assam where land is scarce. Good report!
Finally, some solid news on storage! But honestly, DISCOMs are the weakest link—they don't want to sign PPAs because they're worried about financial risks. The government should step in with stronger mandates. Also, why is AI driving this? Aren't we supposed to solve power for all Indians first? 🤔
The point about solar overhang is critical—58 GW unsigned! That's nearly half our current renewable capacity. BESS could help, but only if tariffs become competitive. Also, glad to see NITI Aayog's 2050 vision—1,800 GW renewables + 2,000 GWh storage. That's the kind of planning India needs, but execution will be key.
We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.