• About us
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • Dubai
    • Tanzania
    • United Kingdom
    • USA
  • Blitz India Business
  • Blitz Highlights
    • Special
    • Spotlight
    • Insight
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Legal
  • Perspective
  • Nation
    • East
    • West
    • North
    • South
  • Business & Economy
  • World
  • Hindi Edition
  • International Editions
    • Dubai
    • Tanzania
    • United Kingdom
    • USA
  • Blitz India Business
No Result
View All Result
World's first weekly chronicle of development news
No Result
View All Result

Every Barrel India Doesn’t Import: Why the Energy Transition Is a Security Policy

by Blitz India Media
July 15, 2026
in Energy, News
0
solar

Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI:Read Tuesday’s dominant number the right way and a strategy comes into focus. A distant strait can put several dollars on a barrel of oil in an afternoon and ripple straight into an Indian household’s budget and a trading screen. That recurring vulnerability is one India inherited — and the clean-energy build is the one it is choosing to grow its way out of. The deeper significance of that build, beyond the climate headlines, is that it is an energy-security policy.

The logic is simple arithmetic. Every unit of solar or wind added, every electric scooter and car sold, every litre of biofuel blended, shrinks the quantum of imported crude the economy must buy at whatever price the world sets that day. India has moved fast on the supply side: non-fossil sources now make up roughly half of installed power capacity — a milestone reached years ahead of target — with non-fossil capacity above 280 GW and the fastest annual clean-energy additions on record, placing India among the top three nations globally.

You cannot negotiate with a strait. You can, over years, need it less. The energy transition is how an import-dependent nation buys back its own resilience.

The Long View

  • The exposure: India imports most of the crude it consumes
  • The hedge: renewables + EVs + biofuels shrink the import bill
  • The base: ~50% of capacity now non-fossil; 280 GW-plus and rising
  • The payoff: lower price risk, cleaner air, a domestic manufacturing base

The transition is not costless or automatic. It demands grid upgrades to absorb variable power, a domestic battery and solar-manufacturing base so one import dependence is not simply swapped for another, charging networks that reach small towns, and a fair deal for the workers and regions tied to today’s fossil economy. These are real engineering and social challenges, not slogans, and getting them right is the whole task.

The constructive, long-view read is that India has both the incentive and the momentum to see it through. The same crude shock that unsettles a trading day is the clearest argument for the patient work of electrification and clean power. Handled well, the energy transition turns a recurring vulnerability into a durable strength — and the barrels India never has to import become the truest measure of its progress.

Related Posts

Market
Market

A Cautious Close: The Sensex Slips 561 Points as Crude and Geopolitics Weigh

July 15, 2026
Semiconductor
News

From Blueprint to Wafer: India’s First Home-Made Chips Come Into View

July 15, 2026
India Begin ODI Series Against England at Edgbaston
News

Format Reset Works: India Seize Control of the First ODI at Edgbaston

July 15, 2026
trade
News

Hours From Duty-Free: India’s Pact With Britain Takes Effect Tomorrow

July 15, 2026
Supreme Court
News

SC refuses to stay CBSE’s three-language policy

July 14, 2026
Piyush Goyal Pushes Stronger India-Spain Trade Partnership
News

India, Spain to build resilient supply chains

July 14, 2026
Load More
Next Post
Semiconductor

From Blueprint to Wafer: India's First Home-Made Chips Come Into View

Recent News

Market
Market

A Cautious Close: The Sensex Slips 561 Points as Crude and Geopolitics Weigh

by Blitz India Media
July 15, 2026
0

Blitz Bureau NEW DELHI:After Monday's green-by-the-bell recovery, Tuesday belonged to caution. The Sensex closed 561.46 points lower at 77,054.94, down...

Read moreDetails
Semiconductor

From Blueprint to Wafer: India’s First Home-Made Chips Come Into View

July 15, 2026
solar

Every Barrel India Doesn’t Import: Why the Energy Transition Is a Security Policy

July 15, 2026
India Begin ODI Series Against England at Edgbaston

Format Reset Works: India Seize Control of the First ODI at Edgbaston

July 15, 2026
trade

Hours From Duty-Free: India’s Pact With Britain Takes Effect Tomorrow

July 15, 2026

Blitz Highlights

  • Special
  • Spotlight
  • Insight
  • Entertainment
  • Health

International Editions

  • US (New York)
  • UK (London)
  • Middle East (Dubai)
  • Tanzania (Africa)

Nation

  • East
  • West
  • South
  • North
  • Hindi Edition

E-paper

  • India
  • Hindi E-paper
  • Dubai E-Paper
  • USA E-Paper
  • UK-Epaper
  • Tanzania E-paper

Useful Links

  • About us
  • Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Blitz Highlights
      • Special
      • Spotlight
      • Insight
      • Entertainment
      • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Legal
    • Perspective
    • Nation
      • East
      • West
      • North
      • South
    • Business & Economy
    • World
    • Hindi Edition
    • International Editions
      • Dubai
      • Tanzania
      • United Kingdom
      • USA
    • Blitz India Business

    ©2024 Blitz India Media -Building A New Nation