Thursday, July 9, 2026
News

India must develop solar storage to avoid peak shortages and grid challenge: EAC-PM

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

New Delhi | July 7, 2026 9:56:49 PM IST
India's power system is no longer struggling to generate enough electricity. It is struggling to generate it at the right time, as per a new paper by the Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister.

The paper said the defining problem for the Indian grid has shifted from capacity to flexibility, and three market signals show just how acute the mismatch between solar and non-solar hours has become.

The first signal is playing out in prices. According to the EAC-PM, the intraday spread between solar hours and non-solar hours has widened to a peak-to-trough ratio approaching nine. The gap would be even wider, the report notes, but for the market's price ceiling. In practical terms, power is plentiful and cheap in the middle of the day when solar output peaks, and turns scarce and expensive in the evening when the sun sets but demand stays high.

The second signal is showing up in reliability. The council found that the "grid's failures to meet demand rise overwhelmingly in the non-solar hours, relative to solar hours,". During the day, when solar is generating, the system largely copes. The stress builds after sunset, when solar drops off sharply and the grid has too few flexible resources to ramp up quickly and fill the gap.

The third signal is visible in wasted clean energy. The report says solar is being curtailed in large volumes because it cannot be consumed the moment it is produced. The scale of the loss is significant. The paper estimates that average daily solar curtailment in May 2026 was equivalent to electricity that could have powered more than a quarter of Delhi for a full day.

Together, the three trends point to a grid that is flush with solar power for a few hours and then short of it for the rest. The council argues this is not a generation problem but a timing problem, and it will grow as India adds more solar.

The report said addressing it will require a shift in how power is planned and distributed across the day, with greater emphasis on storing midday surplus and moving demand into solar hours. Without that, the paper warns, the price volatility, evening shortages and curtailment seen today will only intensify as the solar fleet expands. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE BUSINESS NEWS
Biometric authentication set to play big...
Over one-third of households in the East...
FICCI-CRF seminar calls for deeper under...
Apple enters into USD 30 billion chip pa...
VenueInDelhi Completes 10 Years, Crosses...
Taurian MPS Charts Next Phase of Growth,...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
TMC alleges 41 party workers assaulted, ...
NEET UG paper leak case: Accused Motegao...
Uttarakhand becomes India's sixth fully ...
Punjab: Charanjit Channi targets Mann go...
Mamata Banerjee lost cool and slapped he...
'BJP goons threatening me': Mamata Baner...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Trump notifies Congress of intent t... 
"We respond with action, not vulgar... 
FIFA World Cup 2026: Swiss midfield... 
TMC alleges 41 party workers assaul... 
Punjab: Charanjit Channi targets Ma... 
Mamata Banerjee lost cool and slapp... 
"BJP goons threatening me": Mamata ... 
TMC calls ED's move to freeze bank ...