Mineral Resources of India
India is endowed with diverse mineral resources, forming the backbone of its industrial economy. The distribution of minerals is closely linked to the geological structure, particularly the Peninsular Plateau region.
Major Metallic Minerals
| Mineral | Total Reserves | Leading States | Geological Formation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iron Ore | ~33.7 billion tonnes (hematite + magnetite combined) | Odisha (>55% of production; largest reserves), Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, Jharkhand, Goa | Dharwar and Cuddapah series |
| Bauxite | ~3.9 billion tonnes | Odisha (~39% of reserves; ~74% of production in 2023-24), Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh | Laterite formations on plateau tops |
| Manganese Ore | ~496 million tonnes | Madhya Pradesh & Maharashtra (Balaghat-Bhandara belt — leading producers), Odisha (~27% of reserves), Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Goa | Dharwar series; Gondite formations |
| Copper Ore | ~1.5 billion tonnes (ore); ~12 MT contained metal | Rajasthan (Khetri-Singhana — largest producer), Madhya Pradesh (Malanjkhand — single largest deposit), Jharkhand (Singhbhum) | Precambrian formations |
| Chromite | ~344 million tonnes | Odisha (Sukinda & Boula-Nuasahi Valleys -- ~98% of India's production) | Ultramafic rock formations |
| Lead-Zinc | ~700 MT (lead-zinc ore) | Rajasthan (Rampura-Agucha, Zawar — ~80% of production by Hindustan Zinc), Andhra Pradesh, Telangana | Pre-Cambrian metasediments |
| Gold | ~654 tonnes (primary reserves) | Karnataka (Hutti — only operational primary gold mine; Kolar closed 2001), Andhra Pradesh, Jharkhand | Dharwar schist belts |
Exam Tip: Odisha is India's mineral powerhouse — leads in iron ore production (>55%), bauxite production (~74%), chromite production (~98% from Sukinda Valley alone). For coal: Odisha is now the #1 producer (~239 MT in FY 2024-25), but Jharkhand still has the largest reserves (~26.4%). For copper, Rajasthan (Khetri) leads production while Madhya Pradesh's Malanjkhand is the single largest deposit. For manganese, Madhya Pradesh-Maharashtra's Balaghat-Bhandara belt are the leading producers, while Odisha leads in reserves.
Major Non-Metallic Minerals
| Mineral | Leading States | Key Uses |
|---|---|---|
| Mica | Andhra Pradesh (Nellore — largest producer), Rajasthan, Jharkhand (Koderma) | Electrical and electronic industry, cosmetics |
| Limestone | Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Gujarat, Chhattisgarh | Cement (~75% of usage), iron & steel flux, chemicals |
| Gypsum | Rajasthan (~99% of India's production), J&K, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat | Fertiliser (ammonium sulphate), cement, plaster of Paris |
| Dolomite | Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh | Iron & steel flux, refractory bricks |
| Phosphorite (Apatite) | Rajasthan (Jhamarkotra — largest), Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand | Phosphatic fertilisers (DAP, SSP) |
Mineral Belts of India
| Belt | Region | Major Minerals |
|---|---|---|
| North-Eastern Plateau | Chota Nagpur Plateau (Jharkhand, Odisha, West Bengal, Chhattisgarh) | Coal, iron ore, manganese, bauxite, mica, copper |
| South-Western Plateau | Karnataka, Goa, Kerala | Iron ore, manganese, bauxite, gold |
| North-Western Region | Rajasthan, Gujarat | Copper, zinc, lead, mica, gypsum, sandstone |
| South-Eastern Coastal | Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu | Monazite, ilmenite, zircon (beach sand minerals) |
Energy Resources
Coal
Coal is India's most abundant fossil fuel and the primary source of energy, accounting for approximately 57.62% of India's primary energy consumption (2023 data).
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Total Estimated Reserves | ~389.42 billion tonnes (proved + indicated + inferred, as of 1 April 2024) |
| Lignite Reserves | ~47,296 million tonnes (as of 1 April 2024); Tamil Nadu Neyveli accounts for >70% |
| Annual Production (FY 2024-25) | 1,047.52 million tonnes — India crossed 1 BT for the first time on 20 March 2025; 4.98% YoY growth (Coal India 781.06 MT, SCCL 69.01 MT, captive/commercial 197.5 MT) |
| Coal Imports (Apr-Dec 2024) | Declined 8.4% YoY; foreign exchange savings of ~US$ 5.43 billion |
| State-wise Production (FY25) | Odisha #1 (~239 MT), Chhattisgarh #2 (~207 MT), Jharkhand #3 (~191 MT) |
| Reserve Distribution | Jharkhand (~26.4%), Odisha (~25.1%), Chhattisgarh (~18.2%), West Bengal (~11%), Madhya Pradesh (~5%) |
Coal-Producing States
| State | Type of Coal | Key Coalfields |
|---|---|---|
| Jharkhand | Bituminous (best quality) | Jharia, Bokaro, Giridih, Karanpura |
| Odisha | Bituminous | Talcher, Ib Valley |
| Chhattisgarh | Bituminous | Korba, Hasdeo-Arand |
| West Bengal | Bituminous | Raniganj |
| Madhya Pradesh | Bituminous | Singrauli, Sohagpur |
| Telangana | Bituminous | Singareni |
| Tamil Nadu | Lignite | Neyveli |
| Rajasthan | Lignite | Barmer, Bikaner |
| Gujarat | Lignite | Kutch |
| Meghalaya | Tertiary coal | Jaintia Hills |
Petroleum and Natural Gas
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Share of Primary Energy (2023) | Crude Oil: ~31.06%, Natural Gas: ~6.61% |
| Major Oil Producing Regions | Mumbai High (offshore), Upper Assam (Digboi, Naharkatiya), Gujarat (Ankleshwar, Kalol), Rajasthan (Barmer), KG Basin (offshore) |
| Major Gas Fields | KG-D6 Basin (Andhra Pradesh offshore), Mumbai High, Assam, Tripura, Rajasthan |
| Strategic Reserves | Visakhapatnam, Mangalore, Padur (underground rock caverns) |
Renewable Energy Resources
India has made remarkable strides in renewable energy, achieving 50% of its installed electricity capacity from non-fossil fuel sources in June 2025 -- more than five years ahead of its Paris Agreement target.
Renewable Energy Capacity (as of November 2025)
| Source | Installed Capacity | Growth (YoY) | Global Rank |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solar Energy | 132.85 GW | +41% (from 94.17 GW in Nov 2024) | 3rd globally |
| Wind Energy | 53.99 GW | +12.5% (from 47.96 GW in Nov 2024) | 4th globally |
| Total RE (all sources) | ~250.64 GW | -- | 4th globally |
| Total Installed Power Capacity | 505,023 MW (as of Oct 2025) | -- | -- |
Energy Mix Breakdown (October 2025)
| Category | Capacity (MW) | Share (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Fossil Fuel Sources | 2,45,600 | ~48.6% |
| Non-Fossil Fuel Sources | 2,59,423 | ~51.4% |
| Of which: Renewable Energy | 2,50,643 | ~49.6% |
Solar Energy Potential and Distribution
| State | Key Advantage |
|---|---|
| Rajasthan | Highest solar irradiance; vast land availability; Bhadla Solar Park |
| Gujarat | Established solar parks; strong policy framework; Charanka Solar Park |
| Tamil Nadu | High irradiance in southern districts |
| Karnataka | Leading in rooftop solar installations |
| Ladakh | High-altitude advantage; proposed 13 GW Pang solar project |
Wind Energy Distribution
| State | Key Advantage |
|---|---|
| Tamil Nadu | Pioneer in wind energy; Muppandal wind farm |
| Gujarat | Strong coastal and inland wind corridors |
| Karnataka | Consistent wind speeds in hill passes |
| Rajasthan | Jaisalmer corridor; growing capacity |
| Maharashtra | Western Ghats wind corridors |
Remember: India's Three-Stage Nuclear Programme is designed around India's thorium abundance (world's largest reserves). Stage 1 uses natural uranium in PHWRs, Stage 2 breeds plutonium in Fast Breeder Reactors (the Prototype FBR at Kalpakkam), and Stage 3 will use thorium-232 converted to fissile uranium-233. UPSC tests this progression — remember that India is still primarily in Stage 1 with Stage 2 under development. The programme was conceived by Dr. Homi Bhabha.
Nuclear Energy
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Operating Nuclear Plants | 25 reactors at 7 sites (April 2025) — Rajasthan-7 (PHWR-700) connected to grid March 2025; 11 reactors under construction (8,700 MW additional capacity) |
| Installed Capacity | ~8,880 MW (April 2025); Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR, Kalpakkam) achieved first criticality 6 April 2026 — Stage-2 of Three-Stage Programme operational |
| Key Stations | Tarapur (Maharashtra), Kalpakkam (Tamil Nadu), Rawatbhata (Rajasthan), Kudankulam (Tamil Nadu), Narora (UP), Kakrapar (Gujarat) |
| Three-Stage Programme | Stage 1: Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (natural uranium); Stage 2: Fast Breeder Reactors (plutonium); Stage 3: Thorium-based reactors |
Water Resources
India's Water Budget
| Parameter | Volume (BCM) |
|---|---|
| Average Annual Water Resource (precipitation + inflow) | 2,115.95 BCM (CWC 2024 assessment, 1985-2023 period) — revised upward from 1,999.2 BCM (CWC 2019 assessment, 1985-2015) due to incorporation of contributions from Bhutan/Nepal and improved methodology |
| Utilizable Water Resources | 1,137 BCM |
| Utilizable Surface Water | 690 BCM |
| Replenishable Groundwater | 447 BCM |
| Net Annual Groundwater Availability | 411 BCM (after deducting 36 BCM for natural discharge) |
| Annual Groundwater Draft | 253 BCM (228 BCM for irrigation, 25 BCM for domestic/industrial) |
Major River Basins and Water Availability
| Basin | Area (sq km) | Average Annual Flow (BCM) |
|---|---|---|
| Ganga-Brahmaputra-Meghna | ~11,00,000 | ~1,200 (combined) |
| Godavari | 3,12,812 | ~110 |
| Krishna | 2,58,948 | ~78 |
| Mahanadi | 1,41,589 | ~67 |
| Narmada | 98,796 | ~46 |
| Kaveri | 81,155 | ~21 |
Key distinction: "Water-stressed" and "water-scarce" are NOT the same thing. A country is water-stressed when per capita water availability falls below 1,700 cubic metres/year, and water-scarce when it falls below 1,000 cubic metres/year. India's per capita availability has declined from ~5,177 m3 (1951) to ~1,486 m3 (2021), meaning India is already water-stressed and approaching scarcity. This distinction matters in Mains answers on water security.
Water Stress and Challenges
| Challenge | Details |
|---|---|
| Per Capita Availability Decline | From ~5,177 cubic metres (1951) to ~1,486 cubic metres (2021 est.); approaching water-stressed threshold (1,700 m3) |
| Groundwater Over-exploitation | 17% of assessment units classified as over-exploited; Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu most affected |
| Uneven Distribution | Brahmaputra basin has surplus; western and peninsular rivers face deficits |
| Pollution | Major rivers heavily polluted; Ganga Action Plan and Namami Gange Programme for river cleaning |
| Inter-state Disputes | Kaveri (Karnataka-Tamil Nadu), Krishna (Maharashtra-Karnataka-Andhra Pradesh-Telangana), Mahadayi (Goa-Karnataka) |
Resource Classification
Resources are classified along multiple dimensions to aid policy and conservation planning:
| Basis | Categories | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Origin | Biotic / Abiotic | Forests, livestock / Minerals, water |
| Exhaustibility | Renewable / Non-renewable | Solar, wind, water / Coal, petroleum |
| Ownership | Individual / Community / National / International | Cropland / Village ponds / Coal, minerals (Article 297) / High seas, atmosphere |
| Status of development | Potential / Developed / Stock / Reserve | Solar in Rajasthan / Coal in Jharkhand / Hydrogen energy / Forests for future use |
| UN classification (Brundtland 1987) | Sustainable use | Resources used so as to "meet present needs without compromising future generations" |
Article 297 of the Constitution vests all minerals, mineral oils, and resources within India's Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ — extending 200 nautical miles) in the Union of India.
Sustainable Development and Resource Conservation
The Brundtland Commission Report (1987) "Our Common Future" defined sustainable development as development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. India's resource policy framework operationalises this principle through several legal and institutional mechanisms.
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification 2006
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Statutory basis | Notified under Section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 |
| Coverage | Mining, thermal power, river valley projects, infrastructure, industrial estates — categorised into Category A (central appraisal) and Category B (state appraisal) |
| Process stages | Screening → Scoping → Public consultation → Appraisal → Decision |
| Authority | MoEFCC for Category A; State Environment Impact Assessment Authority (SEIAA) for Category B |
| Draft EIA 2020 | Proposed dilutions (post-facto clearance, reduced public consultation period) — drew widespread criticism; not notified |
Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980 — Renamed Van (Sanrakshan Evam Samvardhan) Adhiniyam, 1980 by the 2023 Amendment
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Purpose | Restricts diversion of forest land for non-forest purposes; central government approval mandatory |
| 2023 Amendment | Exempts strategic projects within 100 km of international borders, security infrastructure up to 10 hectares, defence/public utility projects up to 5 hectares; renamed the Act in Hindi |
| Compensatory afforestation | Funded under CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority); Net Present Value (NPV) of forest land levied on user agency |
| Critique | Tribal rights groups argue 2023 amendment dilutes Forest Rights Act 2006 protections in border areas |
Other Key Environmental Laws
| Law | Year | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Wildlife (Protection) Act | 1972 | Protected areas, species protection |
| Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act | 1974 | CPCB/SPCB framework |
| Air (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act | 1981 | Air quality regulation |
| Environment (Protection) Act | 1986 | Umbrella legislation post-Bhopal |
| Biological Diversity Act | 2002 | Access and benefit-sharing; NBA |
| Forest Rights Act | 2006 | Recognition of forest dwellers' rights |
| Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act | 2016 | CAMPA fund utilisation |
Circular Economy Approach
A circular economy minimises waste and maximises resource value through the 9R framework: Refuse, Rethink, Reduce, Reuse, Repair, Refurbish, Remanufacture, Repurpose, Recycle. Key Indian initiatives:
- National Resource Efficiency Policy (Draft, 2019) — promotes 6R principles
- Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) — mandatory for plastics (PWM Rules 2022), e-waste (E-Waste Rules 2022), batteries (BWM Rules 2022), tyres
- Plastic Waste Management Rules 2022 — banned identified single-use plastics from 1 July 2022
- Steel scrap recycling policy 2019 — formalised auto-shredding to reduce iron ore demand
- Mission LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment) — launched at COP27 (Nov 2022), encourages mindful consumption
Resource Planning
Resource planning is essential for sustainable development. India follows a systematic approach guided by national policies and constitutional provisions.
Framework for Resource Planning
| Stage | Key Activities |
|---|---|
| Stage 1: Identification and Inventory | Survey and mapping of resources across regions |
| Stage 2: Planning Structure | Evolving appropriate technology, skill, and institutional framework |
| Stage 3: Matching Plans with National Development | Aligning resource development with overall national plans and priorities |
Key Policies and Programmes
| Policy/Programme | Year | Focus Area |
|---|---|---|
| National Mineral Policy | 2019 (revised) | Sustainable mining, auction-based allocation, District Mineral Foundation |
| MMDR Amendment Acts | 2015, 2021, 2023 | Mandatory auctions for major mineral concessions; opening atomic minerals (lithium, beryllium, niobium, REEs) for private sector |
| National Water Policy | 2012 | IWRM; water as economic good; ecological flows (revised draft pending) |
| National Solar Mission (JNNSM) | 2010 | Target of 100 GW solar by 2022 — achieved Jan 2025 (132.85 GW by Nov 2025) |
| National Wind-Solar Hybrid Policy | 2018 | Optimal and efficient use of land and transmission infrastructure |
| Namami Gange Programme (Phase II) | 2014 (Phase II 2021-26, ₹22,500 cr) | Rejuvenation of River Ganga; sewage treatment, ghats, biodiversity |
| National Green Hydrogen Mission | January 2023 | 5 MMT/annum production target by 2030; ₹19,744 cr outlay |
| National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM) | January 2025 | ₹16,300 crore over 7 years; 30 critical minerals identified |
| PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana | February 2024 | Rooftop solar for 1 crore households; ₹75,021 cr outlay |
| Mission LiFE | November 2022 | Lifestyle for Environment; behavioural change for sustainability |
Conservation of Resources
Mineral Conservation
| Strategy | Description |
|---|---|
| Recycling and Reuse | Secondary extraction from tailings and waste; metal recycling |
| Beneficiation | Improving quality of low-grade ores before smelting |
| Substitution | Using alternative materials (e.g., aluminium for copper, plastics for metals) |
| Controlled Mining | Mining plans mandated by IBM; District Mineral Foundation (DMF) for affected communities |
| Sustainable Mining | National Mineral Policy 2019 emphasises sustainable practices and environmental safeguards |
Water Conservation
| Method | Application |
|---|---|
| Rainwater Harvesting | Rooftop collection; percolation pits; mandatory in many states |
| Watershed Management | Integrated approach to soil and water conservation in catchment areas |
| Drip and Sprinkler Irrigation | Micro-irrigation reduces water use by 30-60%; PM Krishi Sinchayee Yojana promotes "Per Drop More Crop" |
| Groundwater Recharge | Artificial recharge structures; check dams; Atal Bhujal Yojana |
| Interlinking of Rivers | National Perspective Plan linking 30 rivers through 30 canals; Ken-Betwa Link first project |
Energy Conservation
| Initiative | Details |
|---|---|
| Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) | Standards and labelling programme; star ratings for appliances |
| PAT Scheme | Perform, Achieve, Trade -- market-based mechanism for energy-intensive industries |
| National Mission for Enhanced Energy Efficiency | Part of National Action Plan on Climate Change |
| LED Distribution (UJALA) | Over 36 crore LEDs distributed; annual energy savings of ~47 billion kWh |
| PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana | Subsidised rooftop solar for 1 crore households |
Important for UPSC
Prelims Focus
- Matching minerals with states (iron ore -- Odisha, bauxite -- Odisha, coal -- Jharkhand)
- India's coal reserves and production figures
- Renewable energy installed capacity and global rankings
- India's water availability statistics (1,999 BCM total, 1,137 BCM utilizable)
- Three-stage nuclear programme and reactor types
- Key government schemes (Namami Gange, UJALA, National Solar Mission)
Mains Dimensions
- Resource planning and sustainable development -- balancing growth with conservation (GS1/GS3)
- India's energy transition: challenges and opportunities in achieving net-zero by 2070 (GS3)
- Groundwater crisis: causes, consequences, and management strategies (GS1/GS3)
- Mining vs. environment: forest diversion for mining and tribal displacement (GS1/GS3)
- Inter-state river water disputes and federalism (GS2)
- India's strategic petroleum reserves and energy security (GS3)
Interview Angles
- Is India's push for renewable energy fast enough to meet climate commitments?
- How can India balance mining for industrial growth with tribal rights and forest conservation?
- Discuss the concept of "water as an economic good" in the context of the National Water Policy 2012.
- What role can green hydrogen play in India's energy security?
Vocabulary
Bauxite
- Pronunciation: /ˈbɔːksaɪt/
- Definition: A reddish-brown to white clay-like sedimentary rock that is the principal ore of aluminium, consisting primarily of hydrated aluminium oxides and hydroxides with various impurities including iron, silica, and titania.
- Origin: Named after Les Baux-de-Provence in southern France, where the mineral was first described by French geologist Pierre Berthier in 1821; from the Provencal place name Li Baus ("the precipices") + the mineral suffix -ite.
Lignite
- Pronunciation: /ˈlɪɡnaɪt/
- Definition: A soft, brownish-black, low-grade coal with a relatively high moisture content in which the texture of the original wood is often still visible, representing an intermediate stage between peat and bituminous coal in the process of coalification.
- Origin: From French lignite, from Latin lignum ("firewood, wood") + the mineral suffix -ite; first recorded in English in 1808.
Thorium
- Pronunciation: /ˈθɔːɹiəm/
- Definition: A weakly radioactive, silvery-white metallic element (atomic number 90) found in monazite sands, which can be converted to fissile uranium-233 in a nuclear reactor and is the basis for Stage 3 of India's three-stage nuclear power programme.
- Origin: Named in 1832 by Swedish chemist Jons Jakob Berzelius after Thor, the Norse god of thunder; the mineral thorite in which it was first identified was found in Brevig, Norway.
Key Terms
National Mineral Policy
- Pronunciation: /ˈnæʃənəl ˈmɪnəɹəl ˈpɒlɪsi/
- Definition: The guiding policy framework for the exploration, extraction, and management of non-fuel and non-coal minerals in India, most recently revised in 2019 (approved by the Union Cabinet on 28 February 2019), which emphasises transparency through auction-based allocation of mining leases, sustainable mining practices, private sector participation in exploration through Right of First Refusal for RP/PL holders, and community development through the District Mineral Foundation (DMF) — a body established to work for the benefit of persons and areas affected by mining operations.
- Context: India's first mineral policy was framed in 1993 under the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957; it was revised in 2008 and again in 2019. Key innovations of NMP 2019 include: auctioning in virgin areas for composite RP-PL-ML on revenue share basis, rationalising reserved areas earmarked for PSUs that remain unused (now to be auctioned), encouraging merger and acquisition of mining entities, and mandating states to auction mineral blocks with pre-embedded statutory clearances for ease of doing business. The National Critical Mineral Mission (NCMM), launched in 2025 with Rs 16,300 crore over seven years, identifies 30 critical minerals for India.
- UPSC Relevance: GS1 Geography and GS3 Economy/Environment. Prelims tests matching minerals with leading states (iron ore — Odisha, bauxite — Odisha, coal — Jharkhand) and major mineral belts. Mains 2025 asked why mining is an environmental hazard and what remedial measures are required. Focus on: the tension between mineral extraction for industrial growth and tribal rights (Fifth Schedule areas), the DMF's role in affected community welfare, the National Critical Mineral Mission's strategic importance for India's energy transition, and forest conservation under the Forest Conservation Act.
Renewable Energy Target
- Pronunciation: /ɹɪˈnjuːəbəl ˈɛnədʒi ˈtɑːɡɪt/
- Definition: India's commitment to achieve 500 GW of installed non-fossil fuel electricity capacity by 2030 and to source 50% of its cumulative electric power from non-fossil fuel sources, as pledged in India's updated Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) submitted to the UNFCCC in August 2022. As of November 2025, India has achieved 262.74 GW of non-fossil fuel capacity (51.5% of total installed capacity of 509.64 GW), having crossed the 50% milestone in June 2025 — more than five years ahead of the Paris Agreement target.
- Context: India's renewable energy targets evolved from the National Solar Mission (2010, targeting 100 GW solar by 2022) through successive expansions. The 500 GW target was announced by PM Modi at COP26 in Glasgow (November 2021) as part of the Panchamrit pledges. The government has committed to bidding 50 GW of renewable energy capacity annually from FY 2023-24 to FY 2027-28, including at least 10 GW of wind power per year. Solar installed capacity reached 132.85 GW by November 2025 (3rd globally), and wind energy reached 53.99 GW (4th globally). Total installed power capacity crossed 505 GW in October 2025.
- UPSC Relevance: GS3 Economy, Environment, and Energy Security. Mains 2022 asked whether India will meet 50% energy needs from renewables by 2030 and how shifting subsidies from fossil fuels helps. Prelims tests installed capacity figures (solar ~150 GW as of March 2026, wind ~56 GW), global rankings (solar 3rd, wind 4th), the 500 GW target, and the Three-Stage Nuclear Programme. For Mains, connect to Panchamrit pledges at COP26, India achieving 50% non-fossil capacity in June 2025, and the challenge of grid integration, storage, and land acquisition for reaching 500 GW by 2030.
Recent Developments (2024–2026)
India Crosses 1 Billion Tonnes Coal Production — Record FY 2024–25
India surpassed the milestone of 1 billion tonnes (1.03 BT) of total coal production in FY 2024–25 — the first time in India's history and only the second country globally (after China) to cross this threshold. Coal India Limited (CIL) contributed 0.75 BT, while privately owned captive and commercial mines contributed 197.5 million tonnes — a 28% jump over the previous year. Coal dispatch also crossed 1 BT at 1,025 MT. India's coal imports declined 8.4% between April–December 2024, saving approximately $5.43 billion in foreign exchange. India is the world's second-largest coal producer.
UPSC angle: India's coal geography (Gondwana coalfields of Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, MP, Odisha, Bengal), energy security, Coal India's role, and the tension between coal expansion and climate commitments are key GS1 and GS3 topics.
India's Renewable Energy Milestone — 50% Non-Fossil Capacity (June 2025)
India achieved its Panchamrit pledge at COP26 of attaining 50% cumulative installed electric power capacity from non-fossil fuel sources by June 2025 — five years ahead of the 2030 target. As of March 2026, installed solar capacity reached approximately 150 GW (3rd globally) and wind capacity approximately 56 GW (4th globally); total non-fossil capacity stands at 283 GW. India is on track for its 500 GW renewable energy target by 2030. ONGC made five new hydrocarbon discoveries in FY 2024–25 — including Suryamani and Vajramani in the Mumbai Offshore basin and the Chola-1 deepwater gas find in the Cauvery Basin — with 578 wells drilled (highest in 35 years).
UPSC angle: Renewable energy distribution (solar in Rajasthan, wind in Tamil Nadu/Gujarat), ONGC's offshore discoveries, India's Panchamrit pledges, and energy security are central to GS3 and GS1 resource geography.
Current Affairs Connect
| Topic Link | Relevance |
|---|---|
| Ujiyari -- Geography News | Mining policy updates, mineral auction results, water resource developments |
| Ujiyari -- Editorials | Analysis of energy transition, resource conservation, environmental policy |
| Ujiyari -- Daily Updates | Daily news on renewable energy milestones, water disputes, mining regulations |
Sources: Ministry of Coal -- Annual Report 2024-25 | PIB -- Renewable Energy Capacity 2025 | Indian Bureau of Mines -- Mineral Reviews | Central Water Commission -- Water Resource Estimation | Ministry of Mines | PIB -- India's Power Capacity
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