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Home / Business and Economy / India's Energy Sector Faces Dual Challenge

India's Energy Sector Faces Dual Challenge

29 Jan

•

Summary

  • High cross-subsidies strain India's power sector.
  • Renewable energy faces material and capital cost hurdles.
  • New bill aims to reform power distribution and tariffs.
India's Energy Sector Faces Dual Challenge

The Economic Survey 2025-26 has identified critical issues for India's energy sector, namely high cross-subsidy levels in power and the substantial material and capital costs associated with renewable energy. Cross-subsidization, where industrial and commercial users bear higher tariffs to support domestic and agricultural consumers, is being addressed.

To tackle these deep-rooted inefficiencies, the Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2025, was introduced last month. This legislation seeks to transform the market by rationalizing subsidies, encouraging tariffs that reflect actual costs, and enabling direct procurement for industrial users. It mandates the elimination of cross-subsidies for certain categories within five years.

Simultaneously, the Survey points to the renewable energy sector's challenges, despite record capacity additions led by solar power. High capital costs, land acquisition delays, and grid integration issues, particularly with energy storage systems, are noted. The significant material requirements for solar panels, such as silver and polysilicon, are also highlighted as potential roadblocks to greater utilization.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The Economic Survey 2025-26 highlights high cross-subsidies in power supply and the significant material and capital intensity of renewable energy projects.
The bill aims to address inefficiencies, reduce financial strain, promote competition, and rationalize cross-subsidies in the power distribution sector, moving towards cost-reflective tariffs.
The renewable energy sector faces high capital costs, land acquisition delays, grid integration issues, and substantial material requirements for equipment like solar panels.

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