New Delhi: The Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) and MEC Intelligence (MEC+) on Wednesday launched the third annual edition looking at the wind energy outlook in India that highlights wind energy’s critical link to green energy transition.
The outlook, Renewing wind growth to power the energy transition: India Wind Energy Market Outlook 2026, suggests the country can add another 23.7 GW of capacity within the next five years provided necessary enabling policies, facilitative instruments, and the right institutional interventions are put in place.
Ben Backwell, CEO of GWEC, said: “This outlook is published as the world faces a decisive moment; there is a narrow window of opportunity to halt the irreversible damage to this planet from climate change by making an urgent shift to clean energy.
“India can seize this opportunity, but it must kick-start its energy transition after delays due to the pandemic.”
To seize this enormous opportunity, he said, India must focus on three areas: Dialogue between the Central government and the states to foster consensus building; delivery to help match timelines and targets, and the potential for India to be a destination for the global wind manufacturers and suppliers.
Wind power constituted the majority of the renewable energy mix in India, with 37.7 per cent of cumulative installed capacity as of March 2022.
However, the overall estimated potential dwarfs the current installed capacity.
There is over 600 GW of onshore capacity at 120m hub height, with another 174 GW of fixed-bottom and floating offshore wind potential. These statistics demonstrate that there is a huge untapped wind energy potential that will be crucial for advancing the country’s clean energy transition.
Emphasizing the urgency to amplify efforts for clean energy transition, Sumant Sinha, Chairperson GWEC India, said, “If India is to achieve its climate goals set at COP26, it must harness the full potential of its enormous wind capacity, including offshore, at an accelerated pace.”
“We can do it. But to get there, it has to be all-hands on deck, literally non-stop, collaborative and flexible effort from policymakers to clean energy firms to investors to innovators to communities to academia to multilateral lenders — from today, for the next few decades. Nothing less will do if we are to ensure that the clean energy transition is successful so our future generations can literally breathe easier and inhabit a liveable planet.”
The outlook finds that the market in India has been affected by the pandemic, with the second wave of COVID-19 in the country, coupled with global supply chain challenges, causing disruption.
However, the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy took several measures at this time.
For example, the ministry granted a blanket timeline extension, which pushed the 0.7 GW of delayed projects to 2022.
Between 2021 and until the release of this edition, 2.65 GW of the SECI awarded wind or solar hybrid tenders and 3.5 GW of standalone wind projects were awarded.
Unlike the previous years, both standalone and hybrid projects were oversubscribed, this reinstates the ever-growing prominent role of wind energy for decarbonisation and resilience building in the grid system.
Sidharth Jain, MD with MEC+, said, “India’s track record has indicated that the wind installation market is a lumpy market. Considerable momentum has been built in the pipeline since 2017-2018, but inordinate delays in project execution have challenged the assumptions of developers.”
–IANS
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