India Budget 2026: Signals Are Clear — Execution Will Define Outcomes
We convened a stakeholder discussion to assess the India Budget 2026 through the lens of green energy, energy storage, and clean mobility. The conversation reinforced an important takeaway: policy intent is moving in the right direction, but implementation clarity and speed will determine impact.
Key highlights from the discussion:
🔹 Financing & Risk Mitigation:
The restructuring of REC and PFC as market-based financial institutions and the creation of the Infrastructure Risk Guarantee Fund were seen as strong enablers for long-term capital flow into renewables and storage-heavy infrastructure.
🔹 Manufacturing & Localization:
While incentives for advanced cell manufacturing are welcome, speakers highlighted gaps for battery pack manufacturing and balance-of-system components. A recurring theme was the need for a clear nodal agency—similar to the ALMM framework in solar—to enforce localization requirements consistently across tenders.
🔹 Energy Storage & Grid Readiness:
Import duty rationalization for battery packs and equipment improves near-term viability. However, achieving India’s 500 GW non-fossil target by 2030 will require stronger policy alignment on BESS deployment, container standards, and domestic value addition.
🔹 Trade & Global Competitiveness:
The discussion also touched on the importance of aligning domestic manufacturing with emerging opportunities from the India–US trade corridor, ensuring Indian firms are not just compliant—but globally competitive.
As articulated in the Budget by Nirmala Sitharaman, India is positioning itself as a clean energy manufacturing hub. The next step is ensuring policy certainty, realistic timelines, and bankable enforcement mechanisms.
