India is stepping up global cooperation to accelerate renewable energy growth and modernise power systems. The focus is on scaling clean energy, strengthening storage, and building a smarter, more stable grid.
The government has confirmed that it is working closely with other countries and international organisations to support India’s renewable energy goals. The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) is leading these efforts across solar, wind, green hydrogen, energy storage, and grid integration, drawing on global expertise to strengthen India’s clean energy ecosystem.
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MNRE’s Global Push for Clean Energy Growth
MNRE is strengthening ties with partner countries through structured frameworks such as agreements, joint declarations, energy dialogues, and strategic partnerships. These collaborations support knowledge exchange, skill development, joint research, and technical cooperation.
India’s renewable energy partnerships now span multiple regions and include both foreign governments and multilateral platforms. Together, these efforts are helping India adopt global best practices and reinforce its role in the global clean energy transition.
Policy Reforms to Support Scale and Investment
Along with global engagement, the government has introduced key domestic reforms to simplify regulations and strengthen sector governance. A major step is the annual bidding plan of 50 GW of renewable energy capacity from FY 2023–24 to FY 2027–28. Foreign investment norms have been eased with 100 per cent FDI allowed, and inter-state transmission charges have been waived to reduce project costs.
Other measures include notified renewable consumption targets, standard bidding guidelines for solar and wind projects, and the development of large solar parks to improve land and transmission access.
Grid Expansion, Regulation, and Digital Focus
Grid strengthening remains a priority, with transmission expansion supported under the Green Energy Corridor Scheme. Regulatory reforms cover net metering, wind project repowering, offshore wind rules, quality standards, and payment security for generators.
Digital tools are also being widely adopted. Schemes like PM Surya Ghar and PM-KUSUM now use online platforms, digital monitoring, and advanced mapping to improve planning, transparency, and long-term sustainability.
Conclusion
With strong global partnerships, investor-friendly reforms, and digital-first programmes, MNRE is shaping a cleaner and more resilient energy future while strengthening India’s position in the global renewable energy landscape.
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