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Hidden face of solar power

India’s clean energy boom is quietly accompanied by a growing unresolved e-waste challenge

by Blitz India Media
January 3, 2026
in News
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Hidden face of solar power
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NEW DELHI: India’s rapid solar energy expansion is widely hailed as a success. But without a plan to manage the waste it will generate, the transition may not be really clean, reports BBC.

In just over a decade, India has become the world’s third-largest solar producer, with renewables now central to its climate strategy. Solar panels are everywhere – from vast solar parks to blue rooftops across cities, towns and villages.

Alongside large solar parks, millions of rooftop systems now feed power into the electricity grid. Government data show nearly 2.4 million households have adopted solar under a subsidy scheme.

Solar growth has cut India’s reliance on coal. Though thermal and other non-renewables still supply over half of installed capacity, solar now contributes more than 20 per cent. Yet the achievement carries a challenge: while clean in use, solar panels can pose environmental risks if not properly managed.

Solar panels are mostly recyclable, made of glass, aluminium, silver, and polymers – but trace toxic metals like lead and cadmium can pollute soil and water if mishandled.

Solar panels typically last about 25 years, after which they are removed and discarded. India currently has no dedicated budget for solar-waste recycling and only a few small facilities to process old panels.

India has no official data on solar waste, but a study estimated around 100,000 tonnes by 2023, rising to 600,000 tonnes by 2030. For now, the volume is small, but experts warn the bulk is yet to come – and without rapid recycling investment, India could face a growing waste crisis.

A new study by the Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW) estimates that India could generate more than 11 million tonne of solar waste by 2047. Managing this would require almost 300 dedicated recycling facilities and an investment of $478 (£362m) over the next two decades.

“Most of India’s large solar parks were built in the mid-2010s, so the real wave of waste is coming in 10 to 15 years,” says Rohit Pahwa of energy company Targray.

India’s solar-waste projections mirror global patterns: The US may generate 170,000–1 million tonne and China nearly one million tonne by 2030, following rapid solar expansion in the 2010s.

The policy landscape, however, differs significantly. In the US, solar-panel recycling is mostly market-driven under a patchwork of state rules. China’s system, like India’s, is still developing and lacks a dedicated regulatory framework.

In 2022, India brought solar panels under e-waste rules, making manufacturers responsible for collecting, storing, dismantling and recycling them at end of life.

Experts say enforcement is uneven, especially for home and small-scale panels, which make up 5–10 per cent of installations. Though modest, these panels can still generate substantial waste, as they are harder to track, collect, and recycle.

Damaged or discarded panels often end up in landfills or with unauthorised recyclers, where unsafe methods can release toxic materials. The BBC has contacted India’s renewable energy ministry for comment.
“Solar power gives an illusion of clean energy for two decades, but without a serious plan for recycling panels it risks leaving behind a graveyard of modules and not much of a legacy,” says environment expert Sai Bhaskar Reddy Nakka.
Despite the challenges, experts say the problem is not without opportunities.
“As waste rises, so will the demand for companies that know how to process it,” says Pahwa.

Efficient recycling could reclaim 38 per cent of materials for new panels by 2047 and prevent 37 million tonnes of carbon emissions from mining, says CEEW. India already has markets for glass and aluminium, and metals found in solar cells – silicon, silver, and copper – can be recovered for new panels or other industries, says Akansha Tyagi, co-author of the study.

Currently, most solar waste is processed with basic methods that recover only low-value materials like glass and aluminium, while precious metals are lost, damaged or extracted in tiny amounts.

Experts say the next decade will be decisive for India’s solar goals. The country must act fast – building a regulated, self-sustaining recycling system, raising household awareness, and integrating waste collection into solar business models.

Companies that profit from solar power should also be responsible for what happens to panels once they stop working, says Nakka. “Without proper recycling, clean energy today could mean more waste tomorrow,” he warns.

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