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MNRE Pushes Calibrated Financing for Solar Growth

The Ministry of New & Renewable Energy (MNRE) on Sunday urged financial institutions to adopt a calibrated, well-informed approach while evaluating finance proposals across the solar photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing ecosystem. The ministry clarified that it has not issued any advisory directing lenders to pause or halt fresh renewable energy financing, and stressed the need to expand funding beyond module assembly into upstream capacities such as cells, wafers, polysilicon and ancillary inputs.

No Pause on Renewable Financing — MNRE Clarifies

Reports suggesting an MNRE advisory to stop lending to renewable energy projects prompted the ministry’s clarification. MNRE said it circulated consolidated data on domestic manufacturing capacities to the Department of Financial Services and key NBFCs — including PFC, REC and IREDA — so that financiers can make informed decisions. The intention, the ministry explained, is to encourage balanced lending that supports upstream manufacturing as well as module production.

Why calibrated financing matters

India’s solar manufacturing landscape has expanded rapidly in recent years. MNRE highlighted that policy measures such as the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for high-efficiency solar PV modules and protectionist measures to level the playing field have catalysed domestic capacity growth. The ministry warned that indiscriminate financing concentrated only on module assembly risks creating overcapacity in some segments while leaving upstream gaps unfilled.

Strong metrics, ambitious targets

The ministry noted India has already reached 50% of its installed electricity capacity from non-fossil sources — five years ahead of the target set under its Nationally Determined Contributions. As of 31 October 2025, installed non-fossil capacity stood at about 259 GW, with 31.2 GW added in the current financial year up to October.

MNRE pointed to the dramatic rise in approved module capacity listed under the Approved List of Models and Manufacturers (ALMM): from roughly 2.3 GW in 2014 to about 122 GW today. The expansion demonstrates the catalytic impact of policy incentives and state-industry collaboration, the ministry said.

Guidance to lenders: diversify and look upstream

Rather than restricting financing to module manufacturing alone, MNRE suggested that lenders evaluate projects across the full solar PV value chain — including cells, ingots-wafers and polysilicon, as well as ancillaries like solar glass and aluminium frames. The ministry circulated capacity and market data to relevant financial bodies to enable a risk-aware lending strategy aligned with long-term national objectives.

Government support and policy backbone

MNRE reaffirmed the government’s commitment to make India self-reliant in solar PV manufacturing and to secure a meaningful place in the global solar value chain. This commitment is backed by a package of measures — PLI incentives, infrastructure support and policy interventions aimed at nurturing domestic champions and attracting private investment.

Officials said these interventions underpin India’s ambition to reach 500 GW of non-fossil capacity by 2030 and contribute to global decarbonisation efforts while building domestic industrial capability.

What this means for investors and developers

For lenders, the MNRE message is straightforward: use data, adopt sectoral nuance, and prioritise financing that strengthens the complete supply chain. For developers and manufacturers, the ministry’s push implies opportunities and a signal that support will align with projects that address upstream bottlenecks and long-term competitiveness.

MNRE said it will continue to engage with stakeholders to refine policy, identify infrastructure gaps and ensure financing flows support sustainable industry growth and technological innovation.

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