Centre’s Big Bet on AP’s Energy Through PowerGrid Reforms

The Centre has made it very clear Andhra Pradesh is going to play a big role in India’s energy future. Now, India needs massive investment in power transmission. By 2032, the country may need nearly ₹9 lakh crore just to build and strengthen power lines. Because renewable energy like solar and wind based energy is growing fast. But producing power is one thing. Carrying it safely to homes and industries is another big task.

That is where PowerGrid comes in. Until now, PowerGrid had a restriction. Even though it is a strong Maharatna company with net worth of above ₹92,000 crore, it could invest only up to ₹5,000 crore per project. For today’s mega renewable projects, that limit was too small. It was like having a big engine but being told to drive slowly.

Now the Cabinet has increased the limit to ₹7,500 crore per subsidiary. This may look like just a small change, but politically and economically, it is a big move. It means PowerGrid can take up larger projects and compete strongly in big transmission bids.

For Andhra Pradesh, this is very important. As in this month, NITI Aayog has also announced that they are implementing a new “Accelerating Sustainable State Energy Transition” (ASSET) in partnership with the state where a blueprint is drawn to transform the state into a top-three Indian renewable energy hub by 2035. The vision aims to attract ₹7.5 lakh crore in investments, adding 35 GW of solar, 12 GW of wind, and 60 GWh of storage to achieve Net Zero by 2047. 

The state is pushing hard on solar parks, wind energy, green hydrogen, and big industrial corridors with already a 1 lakh investments in this sector. Andhra’s ICE policy for Clean energy was one of the first in India that was led by Nara Lokesh back than in 2024 which has seen massive succes already in the form of data centres and new energy industries coming to Vizag and other regions around the city making it Vizag Economic Region. Without strong transmission lines, renewable energy cannot reach factories and cities.

By empowering PowerGrid, the Centre is indirectly backing Andhra’s energy roadmap. It is the conffioedmt move by Centre to invest into the state’s clean energy ambitions. After years of policy confusion and slow execution in the power sector, this reform sends a strong message: infrastructure first, growth next.

If Andhra wants to become an energy hub on the East Coast, strong transmission is the backbone. And with this decision, Delhi has clearly shown it is ready to support that dream.

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