Wind power expansion could save India ₹2 lakh crore by 2035: Suzlon VC Girish Tanti
Goa, June 15
India stands to gain significant economic benefits by pivoting its renewable energy strategy toward a more balanced mix of wind and solar power.
According to Girish Tanti, Chairman of the Indian Wind Turbine Manufacturers Association (IWTMA) and Vice Chairman of Suzlon, scaling up wind energy capacity by an additional 90 GW by 2035 could result in a net savings of ₹2 lakh crore for the nation's power system.
Speaking to ANI at the Global Wind Day Conference in Goa, organised by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE), Tanti highlighted a new resource allocation report suggesting that India adjust its current wind-to-solar ratio to approximately 40% wind and 60% solar.
"Effectively, there could be a period between now and 2035, if we increase the wind penetration by an additional 90 gigawatts, that can have an overall system saving of about Rs 2 lakh crores," Tanti said.
According to him, the report estimates total savings of about Rs 3 lakh crore, of which nearly Rs 1 lakh crore would be required for fresh capital expenditure, resulting in net savings of around Rs 2 lakh crore.
Tanti said the economics work in favour of wind because it generates power during periods of peak demand, unlike solar power, which requires battery support to shift electricity to morning and evening consumption periods.
"The primary reason why this saving is coming is because, wind, you can produce when the peak power is required, morning and evening peak power demand," he said.
"Solar, unfortunately, does not support the morning peak and evening peak. So effectively, when you generate more solar, you need more batteries," he added.
The report recommends increasing the share of wind energy in India's renewable energy mix from the current roughly one-to-three wind-solar ratio to about 40 per cent wind and 60 per cent solar.
"If you can move it to about 40 per cent wind and 60 per cent solar, then the savings can come because you will need fewer batteries also and you will be generating when the consumer needs the power," Tanti said.
However, even as the report highlights the economic case for accelerating wind deployment, Tanti said transmission constraints continue to delay projects already built on the ground.
"As we speak, there are several gigawatts of wind turbines which are installed and waiting for transmission to come on stream," he told ANI.According to Tanti, transmission planning continues to follow a four-to-five-year execution cycle, while renewable energy projects are now being developed within two to three years.
"So transmission, there is a catch-up between that four-year cycle versus a two to three year cycle," he said.
He said green energy corridors and state-level transmission projects currently under implementation should help narrow the gap over the next two years.
"In another two years, that catch-up should happen with the kind of plans the government is having," Tanti said.
For manufacturers and suppliers, Tanti said the industry is already prepared for a significant scale-up in installations.
"If you see as an industry, I think industry has almost 24 gigawatts of annual manufacturing capacity," he said.
"Whereas we are this year going to do about 8 gigawatts, the rest is very exporting. So there is enough and more capacity available from the manufacturing side," he added.
Tanti also rejected suggestions that India is behind schedule in achieving its renewable energy and climate goals."We've achieved the first goal already for five years ahead of our target of 2030," he said, referring to India's target of having 50 per cent of installed power capacity come from non-fossil fuel sources. He said India remains confident of achieving its target of 500 GW of non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030.
"The visibility is already there to hit that, largely hit that goal. So we are very confident that in our first review period of 2030, we will hit the 500 gigawatt target," Tanti said.
Apart from transmission challenges, Tanti said land-related and local law-and-order issues continue to affect project execution in certain locations. He added that the Ministry of Power and the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy are jointly reviewing project-level issues with states every month to accelerate implementation.
"It's become a very operational project. And I think that's the reason we are confident that we will hit the 100 gigawatts target," he said.
— ANI
Reader Comments
Interesting analysis. As someone who works in energy economics, the 40-60 split argument is compelling. Solar + battery is still expensive, and wind complements solar perfectly. But I'm curious about the land acquisition issues - wind farms need large open spaces. Is that realistic for India's population density? Also, what about maintenance costs in areas prone to cyclones?
All good points but my concern is about local communities. These wind farms are often set up in rural areas and farmers face issues. Land compensation, noise pollution, and impact on birds. We need a balanced approach that benefits everyone, not just big corporations. Also, what about the recycling of old turbines? That's a growing problem nobody talks about.
Finally some good news! Our renewable energy targets are realistic. But I wish the media would focus on job creation too - wind energy creates more local jobs than solar. Manufacturing capacity of 24 GW but only installing 8 GW is a shame. Need to boost domestic demand and reduce exports. Make in India for India first! 💪
I appreciate the optimism but isn't Girish Tanti a bit biased since he heads a major wind turbine company? The report should be independently verified. Also, 90 GW additional capacity by 2035 is ambitious. Remember the solar park delays and the crying need for grid modernisation. Let's hope the transmission issue mentioned gets resolved - that four vs two year gap is a real bottleneck.
Living in a coastal area, I've seen how wind turbines can transform local economies. The real challenge is the red tape. We have
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