India’s solar power capacity is expected to ​quadruple over the next decade, ‌while wind energy capacity could ​triple, according to ⁠a report published on Thursday by an adviser to the country’s ‌Power Ministry.

The jump in renewables is expected ‌to reduce India’s dependence on ‌coal ⁠as a primary source ⁠of electricity generation to 49 per cent by 2035-36, from more than 70 per cent ​currently, according to the ‌National Generation Adequacy Plan released by the Central Electricity Authority.

In its report, the ‌CEA estimated that the total ​non-fossil fuel capacity would reach 786 gigawatts by 2035-36, ⁠with solar energy comprising 65 per cent of the clean power ‌mix.

Nuclear capacity is expected to triple to 22 GW during that period, while large hydro electricity capacity is seen rising by 50 per cent ‌to 77 GW.

India’s pumped storage ​hydropower capacity is projected to surge 13-fold to 94 ⁠GW, and battery storage capacity ⁠will hit 80 GW by 2035-36 from 0.27 ‌GW currently, the document showed.

Published on March 19, 2026



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