India's power sector emissions fell 2.6% in 2025 (with H1 data showing a 1% decline), marking the first significant drop since 2020 due to record renewable expansion and, to a lesser extent, milder weather. This shift occurred despite rising demand, with clean energy growth (especially solar) meeting new demand and displacing 3% of coal power

India's power sector emissions fell 2.6% in 2025 (with H1 data showing a 1% decline), marking the first significant drop since 2020 due to record renewable expansion and, to a lesser extent, milder weather. This shift occurred despite rising demand, with clean energy growth (especially solar) meeting new demand and displacing 3% of coal power. 

Key details regarding this trend:
Driving Factors: -
Record deployment of 25.1 GW of non-fossil capacity in the first half of 2025 was key, supported by a 15% increase in hydropower and 22% rise in renewable output.
Reduced Coal Reliance:-
 Coal-fired power generation fell 3%, only the second such drop in half a century.
Impact of Weather: ,-
Milder weather reduced air conditioning demand, which accounted for 36% of the drop in fossil fuel generation.
Future Outlook: -
The structural shift suggests India's power sector emissions could peak before 2030, a key step in its net-zero 2070 target. 
This decline indicates a potential structural break from a decade of rising emissions in India's power sector. 

MJF Lion ER YK Sharma 

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