The Indian government has advised private companies and organizations to adopt a two-day work-from-home policy in order to reduce daily energy consumption and ease supply pressures, This was preceded by the government order to all its offices to observe WFH by its employees to reduce the petro products consumption. The prices of all petro products have been raised in the recent days. Chinese media has noted all these developments in India in the recent days.
According to the GT commentator, the move is part of the Indian government's broader effort to curb fuel use amid rising international crude prices. Behind this fuel-saving campaign lies not merely short-term energy pressure, but the structural shortcomings of India's energy system, and challenges that go beyond a spike in oil prices.
As GT sees it, India is in a critical juncture of rapid economic growth and accelerating urbanization. Its industrial scale is expanding, its total energy consumption in production and daily life continues to expand, and its demand for energy is climbing steadily.
For a long time, however, India has been highly dependent on energy imports due to its limited domestic energy production capacity. In a world where geopolitical tensions disrupt supply chains and cause volatile international oil and gas prices, this dependence is both expensive and risky.
According to this Chinese official analysis, as India's industrialization accelerates, the energy pressure will only intensify. This is precisely why renewable energy has moved from being a nice-to-have to an absolute necessity. This is not only a matter of India's energy security but also of its industrialization path and its commitment to carbon neutrality.
GT analysis then mentions India has set an ambitious goal of meeting its target of 500 gigawatts of non-fossil fuel power capacity by 2030. However, in key areas such as photovoltaic modules, wind power equipment, and battery storage systems, India still relies heavily on external supply. All of this points to a new opportunity for deeper cooperation between India and China in the new-energy field.
As per the Chinese official suggestion, a pragmatic path for India lies in strengthening communication and cooperation with neighbouring countries, including China, and tapping the potential of new-energy cooperation. Chinese companies produce solar modules, wind turbines, and other types of equipment that hold a dominant position in the global market, with clear cost advantages. For India, importing Chinese clean-energy technology and equipment would not only significantly reduce the cost of new-energy projects but also accelerate its own energy transition and enhance self-sufficiency. For China, India's vast energy market and rapidly growing installed capacity offer broad overseas development opportunities for Chinese new-
This latest offer by the Chinese experts for India-China collaboration in new energy has come in the context of the present state of expanding economic relations between India and China after the last meeting of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the Chinese President Xi Jinping last year. There is no denying that in recent years, China-India relations have experienced some twists and turns. However, the trend since 2025 suggests that bilateral ties are moving beyond a reset and fresh start toward a new level of improvement. As Chinese Ambassador Xu Feihong stated in February this year, exchanges at all levels have become more frequent, and economic and trade cooperation has reached new heights.
In 2025, bilateral trade reached a record high of $155.6 billion, a year-on-year rise of more than 12 percent. In the first four months of 2026, India’s exports to China surged by 36.7 per cent year on year, according to the latest data. But still, there is huge potential for economic and trade cooperation between the two countries in new areas including the renewable energy..
There is huge potential for economic and trade cooperation between the two countries, not only proving the high complementarity of the two economies but also laying a solid foundation for further expanding cooperation in emerging fields, including new-energy technology.
If this momentum can be maintained and transformed into a more open and stable policy environment, cooperation in the new-energy field is expected to become a new growth point of China-India economic relations, Chinese side feels.
Experts feel that the deepening of China-India new-energy cooperation aligns with the development interests of both countries and will have a positive impact on regional and even global energy governance. Collaborative efforts in solar energy, wind power, and other fields could reduce the cost of clean-energy technologies, promote South-South cooperation, and provide a replicable model for other developing countries.
India ministries have taken a number of steps including the dilution of the controversial press note issued in 2020 to facilitate higher Chinese direct investment into India. But India will also have to be alert to its strategic security interests. The govt agencies have to study the merits and demerits of more Chinese investment in renewable energy areas. Since China is now interested to transform complementary advantages to tangible cooperation projects, Indian officials and the political leadership have to take a decision on further Chinese cooperation in new energy areas to meet the oil import challenge. (IPA Service)
China Seeks to Collaborate with India in the Area of Renewable Sector Energy
Beijing Ready to Help New Delhi to Achieve 500 GW of Non-Fossil Fuel Capacity by 2030
Satyaki Chakraborty - 2026-05-19 11:59 UTC
In a significant development in the sphere of India-China economic cooperation, China has offered its assistance to India in dealing its energy security challenge in the context of the present US war in Iran and crisis in oil shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. IN a commentary in the official organ of the Chinese Communist Party Global Times, the view has been expressed that India can depend on the supplies from China in the areas of equipment and machinery related to renewable energy generation to bring down its dependence on energy imports.