Capex Subsidy Push for Solar PV Upstream Manufacturing

Context:

The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) and the Ministry of Finance are discussing a capital expenditure (capex) subsidy scheme to strengthen India’s upstream solar photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing, aiming to reduce dependence on imports, especially from China.

Key Highlights:

  • Proposed Government Initiative
  • New capex subsidy for:
    • Polysilicon refining
    • Ingot manufacturing
    • Wafer production
  • Targets projects sanctioned under the PLI scheme that have not yet taken off.
  • Existing Capacity Gaps
  • Solar PV cell manufacturing capacity: ~27 GW.
  • Ingot & wafer capacity: ~2 GW (major bottleneck).
  • Upstream progress slower than downstream module assembly.
  • Import Dependence (FY25)
  • PV Cells: $1,641 million
  • Wafers: $156 million
  • Polysilicon: $0.03 million
  • China dominates high-efficiency solar inputs.
  • PLI Scheme Background
  • Launched in March 2021.
  • Target: 65 GW per annum integrated solar PV manufacturing capacity.
  • Total outlay: ₹24,000 crore.
  • As of June 2025, only ~29% operational capacity achieved.
  • Structural Challenges
  • Polysilicon production is highly electricity-intensive.
  • Need for low-cost renewable power for competitiveness.
  • Pricing pressures due to Chinese economies of scale.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Polysilicon: High-purity silicon used to manufacture solar cells.
  • Ingot: Block of purified silicon cast for wafer slicing.
  • Wafer: Thin semiconductor slice used in solar cell fabrication.
  • Solar PV Module: Assembly of solar cells generating electricity.
  • Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme:
    • Incentive linked to incremental production.
    • Aims to boost domestic manufacturing.
  • Solar energy under National Solar Mission (part of NAPCC).

Relevant Mains Points:

GS Paper 3 – Economy

  • Strengthening upstream capacity improves value addition within India.
  • Reduces trade deficit in renewable technology imports.
  • Enhances supply chain resilience amid global geopolitical tensions.

GS Paper 3 – Science & Technology

  • Building integrated solar manufacturing ecosystem.
  • Need for technological upgrading to match global efficiency standards.

GS Paper 2 – Governance

  • Policy coordination between MNRE and Finance Ministry.
  • Capex subsidy vs output-based incentives debate.
  • Balancing fiscal prudence with industrial policy.

Strategic Implications

  • Supports Atmanirbhar Bharat in clean energy.
  • Reduces strategic vulnerability to Chinese dominance.
  • Enhances India’s climate leadership credibility.

Way Forward:

  • Provide stable policy signals and long-term tariff certainty.
  • Ensure access to affordable renewable power for polysilicon plants.
  • Promote R&D and technology partnerships.
  • Integrate with export strategy for Global South markets.

UPSC Relevance:

  • Industrial Policy & PLI Scheme
    • Renewable Energy Supply Chains
    • Trade Deficit & Import Substitution
    • Energy Security & Climate Commitments
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