Cheap electrotech is enabling India to industrialise without the long fossil detour taken by China and the West.
22 Jan 2026
9 Minutes Read
**Sumant Sinha ** CEO ReNew
Summary
India is forging a better path to the electrotech future of energy. Cheap solar and batteries are enabling India to develop without the long fossil detour taken by the West and China.
When we compare India today with China at equivalent income levels ($11,000 PPP in 2012), several observations emerge:
- **Rapid solar deployment. **In 2012, China had negligible solar generation. In 2025, solar accounted for 9% of India’s electricity generation, up from half a percent a decade earlier. India has a powerful new tool to scale cheap power, and it is using it to spectacular effect.
- **Much lower coal use. **Indian per capita coal generation, at 1 MWh, is roughly 40% of China’s level in 2012. Coal demand is approaching its peak and is very unlikely to follow China’s subsequent ramp-up to around 4 MWh per person.
- **Rapid growth in EVs. **In 2012, China had almost no electric vehicles on the road. By mid-2025, EVs accounted for around 5% of car sales in India and the country is the global leader in electric three-wheeler sales.
- Much lower oil demand for transport. India’s per capita road oil demand, at 96 litres, is about half of China’s level in 2012 and is close to peaking. India is not going to rescue the oil industry.
- **A similar rapid electrification pathway. **India’s electrification rate is nearly 20%, comparable to China’s level in 2012, and is growing relentlessly by around five percentage points per decade.
The benefits to India are substantial. This energy path avoids deep fossil fuel dependency while positioning the country to supply electrotech to the world.
A new path for emerging economies. India is showing other countries how to take a cheaper, faster, cleaner pathway to the electrotech future.
India is taking a better path to the electrotech future without the fossil fuel detour.
Kingsmill Bond Energy Strategist, Ember
Introduction
Many compare India and China’s energy systems as they stand today. From this perspective, China is ahead in most new energy metrics, from solar capacity to electrification.
But the comparison has limits. China is at a later stage of development. China’s GDP in purchasing power terms is over double that of India; its electricity consumption is five times greater; its manufacturing output, in monetary terms, is nearly an order of magnitude larger.