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BackIndia's $55 Billion Renewable Energy Assets Face Climate Threat by 2030
India's $55 Billion Renewable Energy Assets Face Climate Threat by 2030
Developing
Economic Times6/25/2026Energy2 min readIndia

India's $55 Billion Renewable Energy Assets Face Climate Threat by 2030

Quick Look

A new study reveals that 90% of India's planned $55 billion in solar, wind, and hydropower assets by 2030 are highly vulnerable to extreme weather events like floods and wildfires, threatening the nation's clean energy transition.

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Why It Matters

India's ambitious renewable energy expansion is threatened by climate change, with a significant portion of planned assets vulnerable to extreme weather events by 2030.

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The majority of India’s planned renewable energy infrastructure will be exposed to escalating climate hazards, putting about $55 billion of physical assets at risk of damage by the end of this decade, according to a new study.

Some 239 gigawatts of proposed solar, wind and hydropower capacity across 10 Indian states — about 90% of the total — face high or critical vulnerabilities to compounding weather events like tornadoes, wildfires and extreme floods, Zurich Insurance Group AG said in an assessment published Thursday.

“It hits the balance sheet,” Mark Fletcher, head of Zurich Resilience Solutions for Asia Pacific, said in an interview. “If your solar panel is less efficient, you’re generating less revenue. If your wind farm is blown down and you have four or five turbines damaged, you have a business interruption on the revenue side, but you also have a direct cost to fix that.”

The findings underscore the scale of the challenge for India — the world’s third-largest carbon dioxide emitter — to transition its vast energy system, even as it makes rapid progress toward a target to raise the share of electricity generation capacity from non-fossil fuel sources to 60% by 2035. Adding ever greater volumes of solar panels or wind turbines won’t be sufficient if the physical hardware cannot survive extreme weather conditions.

Project developers are increasingly finding that an ability to prove they are responding to climate risks is a “condition of capital” to secure financing, Fletcher said.

“Capital is not infinite,” said Ajay Hegde, head of commercial insurance at Zurich Kotak General Insurance, a local unit of Zurich Insurance. “It will then definitely flow towards the ones which show a lot more resilience, versus those which don’t show the resilience.”

Vulnerabilities are most pronounced for solar projects, which accounted for nearly 70% of the 871 planned assets assessed in the report. And while developers routinely model the potential impacts of extreme wind, there’s less attention paid to the risks from hail, which poses a particular threat in prime solar corridors in Rajasthan and Gujarat.

Hail strikes don’t only threaten shattered panels, they can also induce microscopic fractures that silently degrade a solar plant’s output over time, eating into a project’s revenue. Meanwhile, in drier regions, prolonged droughts compound problems by caking dust onto modules, forcing operators to choose between diminished generation and costly, water-intensive cleaning cycles, Zurich said.

Projected losses as a result of climate damage could be roughly halved to $27 billion with early investment on resilience measures of about $4.6 billion, according to the report.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Projected losses from climate damage could be halved to $27 billion with $4.6 billion in resilience investments.

    Likely · Medium term

Open Questions

  • What specific resilience measures are most effective for Indian renewable assets?
  • How will insurance costs be affected by these climate risks?
  • What is the timeline for implementing resilience investments?

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This article was originally published by Economic Times.

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