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India adds record 24.5 GW of solar in 2024

India installed a record 24.5 gigawatts of solar capacity in 2024 — more than double what the country added in 2023. The leap, confirmed by JMK Research & Analytics, pushed India’s total renewable energy capacity past 209 gigawatts and signals a solar buildout accelerating faster than almost anyone predicted.

At a glance

  • Solar capacity additions: India’s 24.5 GW of new solar in 2024 C.E. included 18.5 GW of utility-scale PV, 4.59 GW of rooftop systems, and 1.48 GW of off-grid installations — a mix that reached homes, farms, and large power plants alike.
  • Rooftop solar growth: Rooftop installations rose 53% year over year, with 700,000 new systems installed in just 10 months — a surge JMK Research ties directly to the government’s PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana subsidy scheme.
  • Wind energy expansion: India added 3.4 GW of wind capacity in 2024 C.E., a 21% increase from 2023, bringing renewables other than solar along for the ride as the country builds toward its clean energy targets.

What drove the surge

The story behind the numbers is partly policy. India’s PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana — which translates roughly as “free electricity for homes” — launched in 2024 C.E. and offered subsidies to households installing rooftop solar panels. The response was immediate. Seven hundred thousand rooftop systems went up in 10 months.

Off-grid solar grew even faster in percentage terms, rising 197% from 2023. That figure matters because off-grid systems often reach rural and remote communities that the main electricity grid has never reliably served. For those households, solar isn’t a climate gesture — it’s light, refrigeration, and charging a phone.

Utility-scale additions nearly tripled from the year before, reaching 18.5 GW. Large solar farms take years to plan and permit, so a tripling in a single year reflects decisions made well before 2024 C.E. and a pipeline that has finally matured.

Why 209 gigawatts matters

India now holds more than 209 GW of total renewable energy capacity, with solar accounting for 47% of that total. To put 209 GW in perspective: the entire electricity generation capacity of Germany — one of the world’s largest economies — sits at roughly 250 GW across all sources combined.

India set a national target of 500 GW of non-fossil energy capacity by 2030. At the pace of 2024 C.E., it is not certain the country hits that mark on time — analysts still flag permitting bottlenecks, grid integration costs, and financing gaps in certain states as real constraints. But the trajectory has shifted noticeably upward.

The International Energy Agency has noted India as one of the key drivers of global renewable growth over the next decade. IRENA similarly points to India’s combination of falling technology costs, strong domestic manufacturing ambitions, and government policy as a rare alignment of forces.

Who benefits — and what remains hard

The rooftop and off-grid numbers are where the human story lives. India has hundreds of millions of people who still experience unreliable power — voltage fluctuations, hours-long outages, or no grid connection at all. Rooftop solar, when paired with a battery or even just used during daylight, changes daily life in ways that aggregate gigawatt figures don’t fully capture.

The PM Surya Ghar scheme has also drawn attention for how it was designed. Subsidies flow to households that install qualifying systems, and the program has actively targeted lower-income families, not just those who could already afford solar without help. Whether that targeting holds as the program scales is a question worth watching.

India also still relies heavily on coal for its baseload power. Solar additions of 24.5 GW in a year are significant, but India’s electricity demand is growing fast — meaning new renewables add to the system rather than simply replacing fossil capacity in the near term. The coal question remains complicated, shaped by energy security concerns, state-level politics, and the simple fact that hundreds of millions of people need reliable power now.

None of that diminishes what 2024 C.E. showed. India built more solar in a single year than most countries have in their entire histories. It did so through a combination of large-scale infrastructure and a program that put panels on the rooftops of ordinary families. That combination — scale and reach together — is what separates a record from a milestone.

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For more on this story, see: PV Magazine

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