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India's Grids Must Now Be Smart Enough For Clean Power
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India's Grids Must Now Be Smart Enough For Clean Power

Forbes · May 10, 2026, 12:45 PM

Key takeaways

  • Energy India's Grids Must Now Be Smart Enough For Clean Power By Ken Silverstein,
  • For Rajasthan's energy secretary, Arti Dogra, that distinction matters.
  • Historically, Rajasthan served as a microcosm of the developing world’s energy struggle.

Energy India's Grids Must Now Be Smart Enough For Clean Power By Ken Silverstein,

Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Ken Silverstein analyzes the Energy Transition, AI and Geopolitics Follow Author May 10, 2026, 08:45am EDT--:-- / --:--This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.In this photograph taken on October 5, 2021, farmer and doctor Amit Singh speaks during an interview with AFP at his solar farm in Bhaloji village of India's Rajasthan state. FEATURE by Glenda KWEK (Photo by SAJJAD HUSSAIN / AFP) / TO GO WITH Climate-UN-COP26-energy-solar,FEATURE by Glenda KWEK (Photo by SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP via Getty Images)AFP via Getty ImagesIn Rajasthan, India's largest state, the energy transition is no longer just about how many solar panels rise from the desert. It is a fundamental stress test of whether a legacy grid can evolve to handle the volatile surges of a low-carbon future.

For Rajasthan's energy secretary, Arti Dogra, that distinction matters. The challenge isn't producing more clean electricity—the state has already cracked that part. Across India, non-fossil sources now account for 50% of total installed capacity, a milestone reached in June 2025—five years ahead of the country's Paris Agreement commitments. It's making sure power actually reaches farmers, that the grid doesn't buckle as solar scales, and that utility crews can fix problems before they cascade into outages.

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