Strip away the daily tape and one structural theme dominates India’s capital-allocation story: the energy transition. India now carries about 283 GW of non-fossil power capacity — more than half its installed mix and roughly 57% of the 500 GW target set for 2030 — after a record year of additions and a first half of 2026 that saw a burst of new solar and wind. The megawatts are arriving. The next decade of returns will be decided by what carries and firms them.
Follow the money and the frontier is clear. Generation capacity, especially solar, has become close to a commodity — abundant, cheap and quick to build. The scarce, value-accruing assets are shifting downstream: battery and pumped-storage capacity to move power from sunny afternoons to peak-demand evenings; transmission corridors to carry it from resource-rich states to load centres; and the grid-management and manufacturing layers — cells, modules, inverters — that localise value that was once imported.
The cheap part of the energy transition is now built. The bankable part — storage, wires, and the factories that make the kit — is where the next decade of capital goes.
The honest account names the friction. Storage economics are still maturing, transmission build lags generation, land and clearances slow large projects, and long-tenor financing for grid-scale assets remains thinner than for quick-payback solar farms. These are harder problems than adding panels — but they are precisely the ones where policy support, domestic manufacturing incentives and patient capital can compound an early lead into a durable one.
The constructive, long-view read is that India is transitioning from a capacity race it is winning to a systems build it must now master. For investors and industry alike, the signposts to watch are storage tenders, transmission awards and factory ramp-ups — the plumbing that turns a halfway milestone into round-the-clock clean power, and a climate target into a manufacturing and infrastructure opportunity measured in decades, not quarters.


