India Breaks Global Records with Massive Solar Power Export Deal in 2026
In a historic green energy move, India signed a record-breaking agreement today to export 20 GW of solar-generated electricity annually to the Gulf region and Southeast Asia. The $45 billion deal is being called a watershed moment for renewables, trade integration, and international climate action.
This is the world’s largest cross-border solar power contract to date and will supply up to 7% of the total annual needs of participating importers, including UAE, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, and Thailand.
- India’s “SunStream” high-voltage lines and HVDC undersea cables will stretch over 2,500 km, with first power flows expected in 2027.
- The project includes new artificial floating island farms on the Arabian Sea, promising job growth in rural states like Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh.
- Battery storage, “virtual grid” platforms, and AI load-balancing are built into the system, boosting resilience and managing intermittent production.
- Domestic critics raise concerns over land use, local costs, and long-term power priority for Indian consumers.
India's renewable skilling programs are set to train an estimated 320,000 workers for new high-tech solar and grid jobs by 2028.
"This is clean power as global diplomacy. India just put climate leadership and economic ambition on the same wire." – Sunita Rai, Asia Energy Review
Eyes are on Africa and Latin America, where rapid solar buildouts may soon follow India’s blueprint to turn local resources into global revenue and leverage.
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