A Unified Policy Architecture for India’s Energy Future 

Subject: Science & Technology

Indian National Science Academy (INSA)

  • Established in 1935 (originally the National Institute of Sciences of India).
  • Autonomous apex scientific body under the Department of Science & Technology (DST).
  • Advises the Government on Science & Technology policies and publishes evidence-based policy papers on energy, climate, health, and emerging technologies.

Why is an Integrated Energy Framework Needed?

  • Rising energy demand due to industrialisation, urbanisation, and economic growth.
  • High dependence on imported crude oil and natural gas.
  • Need to balance:
    • Energy Security
    • Affordability
    • Sustainability
    • Economic Growth
  • Requires better coordination across fuels, technologies, and institutions.

India’s Energy Achievements

  • Saubhagya Scheme: Near-universal household electrification.
  • Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY): Expanded access to clean cooking fuel.
  • Renewable energy capacity increased from ~40 GW (2015) to 260 GW (2025).

Four Pillars of the INSA Framework

1. Adequacy

  • Reliable and diversified energy supply.
  • Modern infrastructure, energy storage, and digital technologies.
  • Improves resilience and reduces long-term risks.

2. Access

  • Reliable and equitable energy for all.
  • Strengthens last-mile connectivity.
  • Promotes decentralised energy solutions.

3. Affordability

  • Cost-effective energy transition.
  • Encourages innovative financing, efficient markets, and consumer protection.
  • Ensures an inclusive transition.

4. Appropriate Sustainability

  • Sustainability suited to India’s developmental needs.
  • Rejects a “one-size-fits-all” approach.
  • Supports local communities, workforce development, and region-specific strategies.

Cross-Cutting Enablers

  • Promotes Circular Economy for resource efficiency.
  • Supports Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) to reduce industrial emissions.
  • Complements renewable energy and low-carbon development.

Phased Energy Transition Strategy

Near Term

  • Strengthen energy infrastructure.
  • Accelerate renewable energy deployment.
  • Promote Green Hydrogen.
  • Improve institutional coordination.

Long Term

  • Greater adoption of low-carbon technologies.
  • Increased use of biomass and bio-resources.
  • Build a resilient, integrated energy ecosystem.

Integrated Vision

  • Coal, renewables, biomass, natural gas, waste-to-energy, and clean technologies are complementary, not competing.
  • Focus on long-term planning and inter-sectoral coordination.
  • Aim: Build a resilient, affordable, secure, and sustainable energy system while supporting India’s development and climate commitments.

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