India's C&I Renewable Energy Capacity Projected to Triple to 100 GW by 2032: IESA-CES Report
Commercial and industrial energy storage installations expected to exceed 31 GWh by 2032, driven by supportive state policies, rising power costs and corporate decarbonisation goals.
July 03, 2026. By News Bureau
India Energy Storage Alliance (IESA) and Customized Energy Solutions (CES) reports that Commercial and industrial (C&I) renewable energy capacity will rocket from 32 GW in 2025 to as much as 100 GW by 2032. The research, set for release at the India Energy Storage Week (IESW) 2026, also forecasts that Energy Storage System (ESS) installations in the C&I segment will leap more than tenfold, reaching up to 31 GWh over the next seven years.
India Energy Storage Week (IESW) 2026, to be held from July 8-10 at Yashobhoomi (IICC), New Delhi, will bring together 200 plus exhibitors and over 10,000 industry leaders, offering a platform for policy discussion, technical exchange and showcasing innovation across the clean energy value chain.
Debmalya Sen, President of IESA, said, “Our new research shows India’s C&I energy storage market is not just growing; it’s accelerating toward a new era. With forward-thinking state policies and rising corporate demand, storage is becoming a strategic tool for resilience and decarbonisation, not just backup. The momentum we’re seeing now will define the sector for the next decade.”
The report, ‘India Stationary Storage Market for C&I Applications: Insights Till 2032,’ attributes this explosive growth to a perfect storm of market drivers: ambitious corporate decarbonization efforts, soaring grid tariffs and a rising need for energy resilience. Critically, state-level regulatory innovation is paving the way. Maharashtra’s newly announced renewable energy and storage policy leads the charge, mandating energy storage for every new RE project above 100 kW and requiring DISCOMs to procure 10 percent of their electricity from storage by FY 2035-36. States like Gujarat, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Rajasthan are also enabling rapid adoption with cost-reflective banking, settlement policies, and transmission charge waivers.
Vinayak Walimbe, Managing Director of Customised Energy Solutions, said, “The numbers are compelling: tripling renewable capacity and a tenfold jump in storage installations by 2032. States like Maharashtra are setting new benchmarks, and the entire ecosystem, from industry to policymakers, now has the data and clarity needed to seize these opportunities and drive India’s clean energy transition.”
Industrial facilities are set to remain the largest adopters of storage, accounting for over half of all ESS installations, while data centres and critical infrastructure, such as hospitals, metro and railway stations, and airports, will see the fastest growth. The study finds that the C&I market is shifting from simple backup power to application-driven storage, with tailored BESS solutions deployed for open access renewables, diesel generator replacements and rooftop solar integration. The technology landscape is evolving as well, with Lithium Iron Phosphate (LFP) batteries dominating and vanadium-redox flow and sodium-ion chemistries emerging as alternatives for long-duration needs. The unveiling of the IESA-CES report will provide the actionable insights and market intelligence required for India’s C&I sector to lead the next wave of the global energy storage revolution.
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