Green Energy

India to mandate locally made solar ingots, wafers for clean energy projects from June 2028

 – India is proposing that clean energy firms use only locally made solar ​ingots and wafers from June 2028, ‌the country’s renewable energy ministry said on Wednesday, in a move aimed at curbing ​Chinese imports.

With this, the South Asian ​country is looking to ensure the usage of ⁠domestically made components across the entire ​solar panel manufacturing chain.

India currently has a ​manufacturing capacity of about 2 gigawatt (GW) for ingots and wafers.

Companies including Waaree Energies (WAAN.NS), Tata Power (TTPW.NS),and Indosol Solar (IDOS.NS) ​have proposed billions of rupees of ​investments to build renewable manufacturing capacity as India ‌aims ⁠to double its non-fossil fuel-based power capacity to 500 GW by 2030.

The government has already mandated the usage of locally assembled ​solar panels ​in state-run projects ⁠even though components like cells, wafers, ingots and polysilicon could ​be imported.

India currently relies entirely on ​China ⁠for its imports of cells, ingots, wafers and poly silicon for solar panels.

The ⁠country ​has also directed the ​use of domestically made solar cells from June 2026.

Reporting ​by Sethuraman NR; Editing by Sonia Cheema

This article has been republished from The Reuters.

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