India's Energy Revolution: How Viksit Bharat 2047 Demands New Security

India's path to becoming a developed nation by 2047 requires completely rethinking energy security. NITI Aayog's CEO emphasizes that energy security must now include technological resilience and system flexibility. The approach involves diversifying energy supplies beyond traditional fossil fuels while building manufacturing capacity. This integrated strategy will power India's economic growth while ensuring sustainable development for future generations.

Key Points: NITI Aayog CEO Suman Bery on Viksit Bharat Energy Security

  • Energy security must expand beyond fossil fuel self-sufficiency to include supply diversification
  • India must design flexible grids and financing models for future opportunities
  • Low-cost EV and solar panel production key to integrated energy strategy
  • Private sector engagement crucial for innovation ecosystems and global competitiveness
3 min read

Roadmap to Viksit Bharat involves re-imagined energy security: NITI Aayog CEO

NITI Aayog CEO outlines India's reimagined energy security strategy for achieving developed nation status by 2047 through diversification and technological resilience.

"Our energy transition must be embedded in the overall development strategy of the country. - Suman Bery, NITI Aayog Vice-Chairman"

New Delhi November 13

The pursuit of a developed India by 2047 involves "reimagining our energy security", one that is "inclusive" and "dynamic", said Suman Bery, Vice-Chairman of NITI Aayog, as he addressed the Energy and Security Conference organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).

He emphasised that energy security can no longer be confined to assured fuel supply alone; rather it must be embedded in the wider framework of sustainable development, economic growth and technological resilience.

Bery observed that India's energy transition is under way, but it must be seen as part of the development journey, not a separate track. As he noted, "Our energy transition must be embedded in the overall development strategy of the country."

In this light, he argued, it is time to broaden the definition of energy security beyond fossil-fuel self-sufficiency to include diversification of supply, adoption of emerging technologies, and building system flexibility.

He pointed out that in a rapidly changing world, "energy security is a moving target." Given this fluidity, rigid commitments to one technology or fuel path risk locking us out of future opportunities. Hence, India must design its grid, its financing models, and its manufacturing base with agility and foresight. He emphasised India's need to focus on low-cost production of electric vehicles and solar panels as part of an integrated energy-industrial strategy.

Underlining the urgency, Bery connected this energy agenda directly to India's ambition of reaching a "Viksit Bharat" by 2047. He made clear that in order to climb the development ladder from lower-income to middle-income, and beyond, India's growth model must be powered by energy systems that are resilient, innovative and globally competitive.

For India to sustain high growth, he said, the manufacturing base must expand, supply chains must integrate, and energy systems must support rather than constrain that expansion.

He asked the corporate sector and policy-makers alike to step up. The energy challenge is no longer purely public-sector or regulatory issues, it involves private capital, manufacturing supply chains, innovation ecosystems and global engagement.

Drawing on the insight that India must avoid isolation, Bery urged leveraging global technologies while cultivating domestic capacity, thereby embedding energy ambitions within the larger growth strategy.

To conclude, Bery noted that, by 2047, India must not only expand capacity but anchor its energy systems in resilience, sustainability and future-readiness.

In his words, the journey ahead demands that "grid-designing and grid-financing are going to be a big deal." The roadmap to Viksit Bharat thus involves re-imagined energy security, one that is dynamic, inclusive and geared to power India's leap into the future."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good vision but implementation is key. Hope this isn't just another conference talk. We need concrete policies and investments in renewable energy manufacturing. Make in India should mean making solar panels and batteries here!
A
Ananya R
As someone working in the energy sector, I appreciate the focus on system flexibility. We can't put all our eggs in one basket - need diversified energy sources and smart grid technologies. The future is electric! âš¡
S
Sarah B
While the vision is ambitious, I'm concerned about the cost implications for ordinary citizens. Transitioning to new energy systems shouldn't burden middle-class families with higher electricity bills. Hope the plan includes affordability measures.
K
Karthik V
Excellent points about integrating energy strategy with manufacturing growth. If we can produce low-cost EVs and solar panels domestically, it will create jobs and reduce import dependence. This is the way forward for Viksit Bharat 2047!
M
Michael C
The emphasis on avoiding technological isolation is crucial. India should learn from global best practices while developing its own solutions. Public-private partnerships will be key to achieving these energy goals.

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