Explore how underground energy storage solutions can support India’s clean energy transition by enhancing grid stability, enabling renewable integration and strengthening long-duration energy storage capabilities.
India’s rising population and a progressing middle class have made LPG an essential household fuel, with government schemes like PAHAL and PMUY driving rapid adoption even beyond middle class households.
Escalating conflict in the Gulf is sending shockwaves through global energy markets and trade routes. This analysis explores how disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz could impact India’s energy security, supply chains and economic stability.
This case study examines how India can institutionalise demand response frameworks in the energy sector to improve grid stability, advance regulatory design, support peak load management and enable market-driven efficiency for utilities and industry stakeholders.
AI’s role in India’s low-carbon transformation is expanding — from emissions optimisation and energy efficiency to climate finance credibility and systemic resilience.
Union Budget 2026-27 marks a quiet but consequential inflection point in India's climate and industrial policy. While much of the global discourse continues to revolve around renewable capacity additions and long-term net zero pledges, this Budget signals something more structural.
Explore Grant Thornton Bharat’s pre-Budget 2026 insights across sectors including automotive, banking, technology, infrastructure, healthcare, taxation, and investment priorities shaping India’s economic, regulatory, and policy landscape.
Air pollution in Delhi–NCR is often described as a winter problem that eases with seasonal changes. Long-term data shows a different picture. Delhi's air pollution has become structural and persistent, and the city now experiences conditions that extend far beyond episodic winter spikes.
As India prepares for a defining fiscal moment, the Union Budget 2026–27 is expected to set the tone for the country’s next growth cycle. At a time of shifting global dynamics and evolving domestic priorities, this Budget will be closely watched for clear signals on reform momentum, investment focus, and economic resilience.
As we enter 2026, climate change in India has crossed a decisive threshold—it is no longer an environmental externality or a distant risk, but a measurable economic variable shaping productivity, inflation, infrastructure resilience, financial stability, and national competitiveness.
COP30 revealed major gaps in global climate action, with unresolved fossil-fuel commitments and financing challenges. India called for integrity, equity and urgent reforms to restore credibility in global climate governance.
India’s carbon market goes live with its first Article 6.2 agreement with Japan under the Paris Agreement. The deal enables cross-border carbon trading, green investment, and technology transfer — marking a major milestone in India’s climate strategy.
India and Japan have evolved their relationship into a strong, strategic partnership focused on shared growth and prosperity. This alliance is built on a foundation of economic collaboration, cultural resonance, spiritual connection, and centuries-old civilisational ties. Together, the two nations have made significant strides in navigating the challenges of globalisation and technological change, further deepening their mutual bond.
India is preparing to launch a Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) Mission, a move that can reshape its industrial decarbonisation strategy. If executed well, it can unlock private investments & carbon credit trading besides creating jobs, write Amit Kumar and Pradeep Singhvi.
AI-powered climate models today predict weather anomalies, track icebergs, monitor carbon emissions, and identify sources of pollution with astonishing accuracy
Eight years since its launch, the Goods and Services Tax (GST) has proven itself to be one of the most transformative reforms in India’s fiscal history.