Friday, March 6, 2026

Wind Energy: How India Is Learning to Harness the Power of Air


Stand at the tip of Cape ComorinKanyakumari — where the Arabian Sea, the Bay of Bengal, and the Indian Ocean meet, and you will feel the wind as a physical, palpable force. It is the same wind that has filled the sails of trading vessels for millennia, powered the seasonal rhythms of Indian agriculture, and shaped the landscape and culture of coastal India. Now, with modern wind turbines rising like giants across the Tamil Nadu plains and the Gujarat coast, India is finally harnessing this ancient energy in a systematic and transformative way. 


Wind energy is one of the fastest-growing power sources in the world. In 2024, global installed wind capacity crossed 1,100 gigawatts — enough to meet the annual electricity needs of over a billion households. India, with an installed wind capacity of approximately 45 gigawatts, is the fourth-largest wind energy producer in the world. But this represents only a fraction of India's wind potential, which experts estimate at over 1,700 gigawatts — more than India's entire current electricity generation capacity from all sources combined. 


The geography of India's wind resource is diverse and, in some regions, extraordinary. Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, and Andhra Pradesh all have substantial wind resources. The southern tip of India and the coast of Gujarat experience particularly consistent, high-speed winds driven by the monsoon and the prevailing westerlies. The high-altitude passes of Ladakh and the Himalayas have been identified as having exceptional wind resources that have barely been touched. 


A single modern offshore wind turbine — with blades spanning over 100 metres — can generate enough electricity to power approximately 1,000 to 1,500 Indian homes for a year. These machines represent one of the most efficient and cost-effective ways of generating electricity that humanity has ever devised. Once installed, they run on completely free fuel — the wind — with minimal maintenance requirements and zero greenhouse gas emissions during operation. 


The government has set ambitious targets for offshore wind development along India's vast coastline. Offshore wind turbines, installed on the shallow continental shelf of the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal, can harness stronger and more consistent winds than their onshore counterparts, generating more electricity per turbine. They also avoid the land use conflicts that sometimes arise with onshore wind development. India's offshore wind potential is enormous, and several large projects are in advanced stages of planning. 


Wind energy also creates significant economic opportunities. The manufacture, installation, and maintenance of wind turbines is a major employer — India's wind energy sector already employs hundreds of thousands of people, and rapid growth will create hundreds of thousands more jobs in manufacturing, engineering, construction, and maintenance. India has developed significant domestic manufacturing capacity for wind turbines, with companies like Suzlon becoming global players. 


The challenge of integrating large amounts of variable wind energy into the electricity grid is real but manageable. Wind and solar energy are complementary — wind often blows strongest at night and in winter, when solar generation is lowest. Combining wind and solar with better grid management, demand response, pumped hydro storage, and battery storage creates a reliable, 100% renewable electricity system. Countries like Denmark, which regularly generates over 100% of its electricity demand from wind, have demonstrated this is achievable. 


India's wind revolution is not just about electricity. It is about energy security, reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels, creating jobs, improving air quality, and demonstrating that a rapidly developing country can power its growth with clean energy. The wind that shaped India's past is now powering its future. All we have to do is reach up and take it.


Content Courtesy: Inspired by Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC)

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