While India has increasingly adopted renewable energy, it is also home to some of the world’s most polluted cities due to its longtime heavy reliance on coal and other fossil fuels. ― Reuters pic
While India has increasingly adopted renewable energy, it is also home to some of the world’s most polluted cities due to its longtime heavy reliance on coal and other fossil fuels. ― Reuters pic

CHENNAI, Nov 26 — Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said today he expects the energy-hungry country’s burgeoning renewable energy sector to require an annual investment of US$20 billion (RM81 billion) a year.

“Demand for energy in India will keep growing. There are huge renewable energy deployment plans for the next decade,” Modi told the third global RE-Invest conference.

India’s green energy capacity, which encompasses solar, wind, bio-power, and small and large hydropower, is currently at 136 GW. That is expected to increase to 220 GW by 2022, Modi said.

“These are likely to generate business prospects of the order of US$20 billion a year,” he said, adding that the country’s green energy sector has attracted investments of US$64 billion over the last six years.

Advertisement

While India has increasingly adopted renewable energy, it is also home to some of the world’s most polluted cities due to its longtime heavy reliance on coal and other fossil fuels.

The capital New Delhi has the world’s dirtiest air, with millions choking every winter due to a hazy smog arising from burning of farm stubble, coal-fired plants and car emissions.

Modi said the South Asian nation was among the few countries on track to meet a goal of the 2015 Paris agreement of capping the rise in average temperatures to well below 2 degrees Celsius before the end of the century. He did not elaborate.

Advertisement

The virtual conference was also attended by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and senior government officials from Britain and Denmark.

Solar tariffs in India fell to a record low of two Indian rupees per kilowatt hour this week, with firms based out of Singapore and Saudi Arabia winning bids to generate power.

Modi also said he expects demand for domestically made solar cells and modules to increase to 36 GW in three years.

India currently imports over 85 per cent of its solar cell and module requirements from China, and its local manufacturing potential is negligible compared to its requirements.

The prime minister also said India was set to launch a “National Hydrogen Energy Mission.”

“We want to make India a global manufacturing hub in the renewable energy sector.” — Reuters