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		<title>India&#8217;s Wind Energy Crosses 50 GW, Karnataka Leads with Record Annual Capacity Addition</title>
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					<description><![CDATA[India’s wind power capacity has crossed the landmark 50 GW milestone, following the second-highest ever annual addition of 4,151 MW during FY 2024-25. Karnataka emerged as the top-performing state this year, contributing 1,331.49 MW, pushing its total installed capacity to 7,351 MW. The milestone marks a resurgence in the country’s wind sector, which had taken &#8230;]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>India’s wind power capacity has crossed the landmark 50 GW milestone, following the second-highest ever annual addition of 4,151 MW during FY 2024-25.</p>
<p>Karnataka emerged as the top-performing state this year, contributing 1,331.49 MW, pushing its total installed capacity to 7,351 MW.</p>
<p>The milestone marks a resurgence in the country’s wind sector, which had taken a back seat to solar over the last decade.</p>
<p>Gujarat retained its top spot in total installed capacity at 12,677 MW, adding 954.76 MW this year alone.</p>
<p>Tamil Nadu, the pioneer in India’s wind energy journey, stands second overall with 11,739 MW and added 1,136.37 MW this fiscal.</p>
<p>Wind energy in India began in the 1980s with a test turbine in Veraval, Gujarat, and took commercial shape with NEPC-Micon in Chennai in 1986.</p>
<p>The sector gained momentum in the 1990s, notably with the entry of Tulsi Tanti’s Suzlon, which later became a major global player.</p>
<p>For nearly two decades, wind power was India’s leading renewable energy source until solar overtook it in the early 2010s.</p>
<p>India’s solar capacity recently crossed 100 GW, but wind is making a strong comeback with the latest numbers.</p>
<p>Experts suggest India can install at least 6 GW of wind capacity annually, if enabling conditions persist.</p>
<p>Madhusudhan Khemka, from NEPC-Micon’s founding family, called the 50 GW mark “just the beginning.”</p>
<p>Industry veteran M P Ramesh believes the next 100 GW will be achieved at a faster pace.</p>
<p>Wind’s technical potential remains vast—up to 695 GW at 120m hub height and 1,164 GW at 150m.</p>
<p>Despite past slowdown due to aggressive bidding and project cancellations, the sector is now stabilizing.</p>
<p>U B Reddy of Enerfra Projects credited NIWE (formerly C-WET) for guiding the industry with reliable wind potential estimates.</p>
<p>Ramesh Kymal, ex-head of Vestas India and Gamesa, said wind energy’s progress is a “silent revolution” often overshadowed by solar.</p>
<p>The sector received a crucial policy push through waiver of interstate transmission system (ISTS) charges.</p>
<p>This enabled developers to set up projects anywhere and sell to SECI, the central auctioning agency.</p>
<p>However, most projects still chose Gujarat for its superior wind speeds and land availability.</p>
<p>The central government’s auction model, introduced in 2017, shifted the focus from state-led to national procurement.</p>
<p>But ultra-competitive bidding led to tariff drops below ₹2.50/kWh, causing viability concerns and stalled projects.</p>
<p>States like Tamil Nadu earlier paid over ₹4.16 per unit, a model now deemed outdated in today’s market.</p>
<p>As ISTS charge waivers are set to taper off from this quarter, developers may shift back to state-specific projects.</p>
<p>This will impact project economics, especially in states with lower wind speeds, leading to tariff hikes.</p>
<p>India’s energy planners will now need to recalibrate support policies to maintain momentum.</p>
<p>Climate start-ups and green energy innovators are also facing funding headwinds, potentially affecting future growth.</p>
<p>Yet, the push for renewables continues, with projects like Kolkata’s upcoming EV charging hub adding to the clean energy narrative.</p>
<p>ACME Group also plans to invest ₹10,000 crore in solar manufacturing by 2030, showing diversified clean energy investments.</p>
<p>Despite policy and market fluctuations, wind energy’s journey remains resilient, steady, and vital to India’s net-zero goals.</p>
<p>As India eyes the next 50 GW in wind, industry watchers expect a more distributed, policy-driven expansion.</p>
<p>Wind energy remains key for India’s rural electrification, grid balancing, and clean energy security.</p>
<p>It also complements solar, offering night-time generation during windy seasons, aiding in round-the-clock supply.</p>
<p>More offshore and hybrid wind-solar-storage projects are expected to enter the pipeline soon.</p>
<p>India’s wind sector is delicately poised—but if nurtured well, it could power millions and cut emissions sharply.</p>
<p>With new technologies, better forecasts, and investor confidence returning, the winds of change are strong again.</p>
<p>The government’s next steps—on tariffs, land access, and grid upgrades—will be crucial to the sector’s evolution.</p>
<p>Karnataka’s stellar show this year reflects the benefits of coordinated policy, land reforms, and investor-friendly governance.</p>
<p>The wind industry now awaits further clarity on grid planning, PPA enforcement, and financing reforms.</p>
<p>Global partnerships and climate finance will also be pivotal in scaling wind installations to the next level.</p>
<p>With the 50 GW milestone crossed, India&#8217;s wind story has entered a promising new chapter—quietly, yet powerfully.</p>
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