A new Ember report reveals India is electrifying faster and burning far less fossil fuel per capita than China did at the same stage of economic development. The implications extend well beyond South Asia.
Published: February 11, 2026
When Prem Chand, a rickshaw driver in Delhi, switched from a gas-powered vehicle to an electric three-wheeler eight months ago, he did it for one reason: economics. The e-rickshaw costs less to run and, as a bonus, produces zero tailpipe emissions in a city routinely ranked among the world’s most polluted. His story, reported by CNN on February 11, 2026, is a microcosm of a much larger transformation sweeping the world’s most populous nation.
India is now electrifying its economy faster than China did at an equivalent stage of development, burning significantly less coal per capita in the process. That is the central finding of a January 2026 report from Ember, a London-based energy think tank, titled “India’s Electrotech Fast-Track: Where China Built on Coal, India Is Building on Sun.” The analysis, which adjusts GDP per capita for purchasing power parity using World Bank data, compares India today (roughly $11,000 per person) with China in 2012, when both countries sat at similar income levels.
The implications reach far beyond the subcontinent. India is the world’s third-largest greenhouse gas emitter. If it can industrialise without replicating China’s coal-intensive pathway, it offers a proof of concept that other emerging economies in Africa, Southeast Asia, and Latin America could follow.
The Data: India vs. China at Equivalent Development Levels
The Ember report uses electricity data from its own global dataset, final energy data from the International Energy Agency (IEA) World Energy Balances, and GDP figures from the World Bank to draw its comparisons. The results are striking across three key metrics: coal dependency, solar capacity, and electric vehicle adoption.
Key Comparative Metrics: India Today vs. China in 2012
Solar share of electricity India (2025): ~9% | China (2012): Negligible
Per capita coal generation India (2025): ~1 MWh | China (2012): ~2.5 MWh (40% higher ratio)
EV share of car sales India (2025): ~5% | China (2012): Near zero
Electric three-wheeler leadership India (2025): Global No. 1 | China (2012): N/A
Electrification rate (final energy) India (2025): ~20% | China (2012): ~20% (similar threshold)
Per capita road oil demand India (2025): 96 litres (gasoline equiv.) | China (2012): ~192 litres
Solar-plus-storage vs. new coal cost India (2025): Solar ~50% cheaper | China (2012): Coal ~10x cheaper than solar
Sources: Ember (Jan 2026), IEA World Energy Balances, World Bank PPP data, IRENA RE Statistics 2025, BloombergNEF.
The coal comparison is particularly significant. India’s per capita coal generation stands at roughly 1 MWh, about 40% of what China was burning at the same income level. According to Ember, Indian coal-fired generation fell year-on-year in 2025 for the first time, although analysts attribute part of that decline to unusually mild weather reducing cooling demand. The Ember and TERI least-cost pathway projects plateauing coal demand through to 2030, and the IEA’s Stated Policies scenario sees India’s coal demand in 2035 at approximately today’s level.
On the oil side, India’s per capita road oil demand is about 96 litres of gasoline equivalent, roughly half of China’s in 2012. According to Ember, India’s road oil demand is approaching its peak. As the report noted, India is unlikely to rescue the oil industry.
The Economics Driving the Shift: Why Cost Trumps Ideology
India’s clean energy transition is not principally a climate story. It is an economics story. As Kingsmill Bond, energy strategist at Ember and a co-author of the report, explained to CNN, when China crossed approximately 1,500 kWh of electricity use per capita around 2004, coal generation was about ten times cheaper than nascent solar photovoltaics. Coal consequently supplied roughly 70% of the growth in China’s electricity generation over the subsequent decade.
India is now crossing the same 1,500 kWh threshold in a fundamentally different cost environment. Solar-plus-battery-storage is about half as expensive as new coal plants. Battery prices alone dropped 40% in 2024, according to Bond. These cost reductions follow a consistent technology learning curve: solar, wind, and battery costs decline by roughly 20% every time deployment doubles. Fossil fuels, by contrast, tend to become more expensive as accessible reserves are depleted and producers control supply.
This cost advantage is already visible in India’s renewable deployment numbers. In the first eleven months of 2025, India added approximately 35 GW of solar capacity, 6 GW of wind, and 3.5 GW of hydropower, a 44% increase in renewable additions compared to the previous year. India’s solar installed capacity reached 132.85 GW by November 2025, a 41% jump from 94.17 GW a year earlier, according to India’s Ministry of New and Renewable Energy. Wind energy capacity crossed the 50 GW mark in March 2025. BloombergNEF projects India will add over 50 GW of new solar capacity in 2026, potentially surpassing the United States to become the world’s second-largest solar market after China.
India has already overtaken Japan to become the world’s third-largest solar energy producer, generating 108,494 GWh of solar power compared to Japan’s 96,459 GWh, according to IRENA’s 2025 Renewable Energy Statistics. As of mid-2025, renewables accounted for over 50% of India’s total installed power capacity, hitting a target set under its Paris Agreement commitments five years ahead of the 2030 deadline.
Energy Sovereignty in an Unstable World
India imports close to 90% of its oil and approximately half its natural gas, according to IEA data. That dependency exposes the country to price shocks and geopolitical instability. As Thijs Van de Graaf, an associate professor of international politics at Ghent University, told CNN, renewables help reduce this vulnerability.
The concept of energy independence carries different meanings in different capitals. In Washington, the Trump administration uses the phrase as shorthand for expanding oil, gas, and coal production while curtailing wind and solar development. For New Delhi, energy independence increasingly means building domestic clean energy manufacturing capacity to reduce reliance on both fossil fuel imports and Chinese supply chains.
India’s solar module manufacturing capacity nearly doubled in a single year, from 38 GW in March 2024 to 74 GW in March 2025. PV cell manufacturing capacity jumped from 9 GW to 25 GW over the same period. India launched its first 2 GW ingot-wafer plant, a step toward a more complete domestic solar supply chain. The government has also launched a National Critical Mineral Mission to reduce dependence on Chinese mineral inputs, and introduced customs duties on imported solar equipment to incentivise domestic production.
This industrial strategy intersects with broader geopolitical realignments. A major trade deal signed between India and the European Union in January 2026 has been interpreted as a signal that both parties are seeking to diversify trade relationships away from overreliance on either the United States or China. As Ember’s report noted, the US is becoming an increasingly unreliable trade partner, and China’s supply-chain dominance is generating anxiety worldwide, creating growing demand for alternative partners.
The ‘Electrostate’ Thesis: A New Framework for Global Energy
Ember’s broader research programme introduces the concept of “electrostates”: nations that meet most of their energy needs through electricity generated from clean sources. No country has fully achieved this status yet, but Bond and his colleagues argue that the direction of travel is unmistakable.
The argument rests on three converging trends. First, renewable supply from solar and wind is scaling exponentially. Second, demand-side electrification, through electric vehicles, heat pumps, and industrial processes, is accelerating. Third, batteries and digital grid management are solving the intermittency problem. Together, these three technology groups form what Ember calls “electrotech.”
The global numbers support the thesis. Solar and wind supplied 17.6% of global electricity in the first three quarters of 2025, up from 15.2% over the same period in 2024, according to Ember’s Q3 Global Power Report. For the first time across a sustained period, renewables generated more electricity than coal globally. Ember forecasts that 2025 will be the first year without notable fossil fuel growth in global electricity generation since the COVID-19 pandemic.
Electrotech contributed an estimated 10% of global GDP growth in 2023, including 22% in China, 5% in India, 30% in the EU, and 7% in the US. The sector now captures two-thirds of global energy investment and is responsible for all expected growth in energy jobs. Around 80% of the world’s population lives in fossil fuel-importing countries, and 92% of countries have renewables potential exceeding ten times their current demand. Replacing imported fossil fuels using EVs, heat pumps, and renewables could cut net fossil fuel imports by 70%, saving an estimated $1.3 trillion globally per year, according to Ember’s September 2025 Electrotech Revolution report.
The Challenges India Still Faces
The optimistic trajectory comes with significant caveats. India’s soaring energy demand means that even though renewables are being added at pace, coal is not yet being displaced from the grid, according to Debajit Palit from the Centre for Climate Change & Energy Transition at the Chintan Research Foundation. India has plans to continue scaling coal capacity over the next two decades, and its oil consumption continues to grow, according to IEA country data.
Supply chain dependency remains a serious vulnerability. India’s clean energy rollout still relies heavily on Chinese-made equipment and Chinese-controlled critical mineral supply chains. In early 2026, Reliance Industries reportedly put its plans to manufacture lithium-ion battery cells domestically on hold after failing to secure the necessary production equipment from China. Bond acknowledged that these risks could grow as trade becomes more contentious.
Grid infrastructure is another bottleneck. Integrating large volumes of intermittent solar and wind power requires modernised transmission networks, battery storage at scale, and market reforms to enable flexible, renewable-heavy systems. India’s Ember-TERI least-cost pathway analysis suggests the country does not need to build coal capacity beyond what is already planned under its National Electricity Plan 2032, provided it meets its targets for solar, wind, and storage.
India’s e-rickshaw revolution also illustrates the messy reality of rapid electrification. Many e-rickshaws operate without authorisation and run on stolen electricity. The transition is unfolding faster than regulatory frameworks can adapt, a pattern likely to intensify as electrification spreads to other sectors.
What This Means for Emerging Economies
India’s pathway is not unique. Countries across the developing world are beginning to take advantage of the same cost dynamics. Ember’s research shows that 63% of emerging market electricity demand has leapfrogged the United States in terms of solar as a share of generation. The ASEAN region and Bangladesh have surpassed the US in terms of electrification of final energy demand. Solar is accelerating across Africa, with countries like South Africa and Pakistan already using low-cost Chinese solar panels to bypass fossil-fuel-intensive development paths.
The key insight from Ember’s analysis is that India’s development at this particular moment in history, when electrotech costs have plummeted, allows it to follow a fundamentally different energy trajectory than the one available to China or Western economies during their industrialisation. Nations that are less developed than India today will see even greater advantages as clean energy costs continue falling.
As Van de Graaf told CNN, there is a growing divergence: a US prioritising fossil fuel dominance, and emerging economies positioning themselves for an electrified energy future. The irony, several analysts have noted, is that President Trump’s transactional, go-it-alone approach to energy policy may be accelerating this shift by pushing energy-import-dependent countries to reduce their exposure to volatile fossil fuel markets and unreliable trade partnerships.
India is not yet a clean energy superpower. It remains heavily dependent on coal, its grid infrastructure needs substantial upgrades, and its supply chains are uncomfortably tied to China. But the trajectory documented by Ember’s research, and corroborated by IEA data, IRENA statistics, and BloombergNEF projections, is unmistakable: India is generating more solar power, burning far less fossil fuel per capita, and electrifying transportation at a faster rate than China did at the same level of economic development.
The difference is not ideological. It is economic. When solar-plus-storage costs half as much as new coal, and battery prices are falling 40% in a single year, the rational choice for an energy-import-dependent nation of 1.4 billion people is not difficult to identify. What remains uncertain is not whether India will continue electrifying, but whether it can do so fast enough to meet its exploding energy demand without locking in another generation of fossil fuel infrastructure.
For the rest of the emerging world, India’s experience is the most relevant case study available. If the world’s most populous country can industrialise on cheap solar instead of coal, the orthodox assumption that developing nations must follow the fossil fuel pathway is effectively over.
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Sources and References
• Ember, “India’s Electrotech Fast-Track: Where China Built on Coal, India Is Building on Sun,” January 22, 2026.
• Ember, “The Electrotech Revolution,” September 2025.
• Ember, “Q3 Global Power Report: No Fossil Fuel Growth Expected in 2025,” November 2025.
• CNN, Laura Paddison, “China Is the Clean Energy Superpower, But There’s Another Snapping at Its Heels,” February 11, 2026.
• International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), Renewable Energy Statistics 2025 and Renewable Capacity Statistics 2025.
• International Energy Agency (IEA), India Country Profile: Oil, Natural Gas, and Energy Balances.
• Government of India, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, Press Release, December 2025.
• BloombergNEF, India Solar Capacity Projections 2026 (via The Economic Times).
• Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, Analysis on Peak Power Sector Emissions, 2025.
• India Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF), Renewable Energy Industry Report, 2025.
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