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India’s Electricity Sector: Challenges & Way Ahead

  • India, with 476 GW installed capacity, is the world’s third-largest electricity producer and consumer.
    However, challenges of reliability, clean transition, and China’s dominance as an electro-state risk eroding India’s competitiveness.

India’s Electricity Sector: Current Landscape

  • Installed Capacity: India’s installed capacity reached 476 GW, generating 445 billion units in Q1 2025.
  • Transmission Losses: Even after expansion, Aggregate Technical & Commercial losses remain 20.8%.
  • Universal Access: Over 99% households connected under Saubhagya scheme.
  • Tariff Burden:  India’s industrial tariffs, nearly double China’s, weaken export competitiveness

Challenges of India’s Electricity Sector

  • Pricing Distortion: Industrial users pay twice the efficient costs due to cross-subsidisation.
  • Regressive Subsidies: Electricity subsidies (~1.3% of GDP) mainly benefit wealthy households.
  • Operational Deficits: Poor metering and fragmented data greatly diminish distribution efficiency.
  • Seasonal Shortages: Summer demand surges reveal coal deficits and transmission congestion.
  • Carbon Dependence: Coal supplies about 75% of electricity, hindering decarbonization.

Government Initiatives for India’s Electricity Sector

  1. Saubhagya Scheme (2017): Achieved near-universal household electrification by providing free electricity connections to poor families.
  2. Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Gram Jyoti Yojana (DDUGJY): Strengthens rural power distribution and separates agricultural and domestic feeders.
  3. Ujwal DISCOM Assurance Yojana: Financial and operational restructuring of DISCOMs to reduce losses and improve efficiency.
  4. National Solar Mission: Promotes solar energy generation to meet renewable energy targets and reduce carbon footprint.
  5. Smart Meter National Programme: Introduces smart metering for accurate billing, loss reduction, and improved demand management.

Way Forward

  • Tariff Reform: Simplify tariffs and eliminate cross-subsidies, as demonstrated by Delhi reforms.
  • Discom Reform: Odisha’s privatisation shows that restructuring distribution boosts efficiency.
  • Exit Frameworks: Bihar’s unbundling indicates that exit pressure improves utility efficiency.
  • Technological Upgrade: Smart grids, GIS tracking, and smart meters help decrease distribution losses.
  • Targeted Subsidies: Direct electricity subsidies to the poorest consumers using metered data and DBT.

India’s electricity sector has near-universal access, but DISCOM, grid, and renewable challenges persist. Reforms and private-sector participation are crucial to achieve 500 GW non-fossil capacity and 24×7 reliable power by 2030.

Reference: Indian Express | PMFIAS: Electricity Demand in India

PMF IAS Pathfinder for Mains – Question 320

Q. India has emerged as a major producer of electricity, yet concerns over reliability and sustainability persist. Critically examine how these challenges impact the country’s long-term energy security and its target of achieving 500 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030. (250 Words) (15 Marks)

Approach

  • Introduction: Write a contextual introduction by mentioning the key facts and data.
  • Body: Examine the reliability and sustainability challenges, impact on the country’s long-term energy security and its target and way forward.
  • Conclusion: Emphasis on a multi-pronged approach to achieving 500 GW of clean energy by 2030.

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