India has proposed requiring clean energy firms to use domestically produced solar ingots and wafers from June 2028 to reduce reliance on Chinese imports
India is proposing that clean energy firms use only locally made solar ingots and wafers from June 2028, the country’s renewable energy ministry said on Wednesday, in a move aimed at curbing Chinese imports.
With this, the South Asian country is looking to ensure the usage of domestically made components across the entire solar panel manufacturing chain. Companies including Waaree Energies (WAAN.NS), opens new tab, Tata Power (TTPW.NS), opens new tab and Indosol Solar (IDOS.NS), opens new tab have proposed billions of rupees of investments to build renewable manufacturing capacity as India aims to double its non-fossil fuel-based power capacity to 500 GW by 2030.
The government has already mandated the usage of locally assembled solar panels in state-run projects even though components like cells, wafers, ingots and polysilicon could be imported.
India currently relies entirely on China for its imports of cells, ingots, wafers and polysilicon for solar panels.
The country has also directed the use of domestically made solar cells from June 2026.
(Except for the headline this story has not been edited by Firstpost staff.)
End of Article

