Davos buzzed with optimism as Union Minister Pralhad Joshi rallied global financiers to fuel India’s clean energy ambitions at the WEF. On January 20, he outlined sweeping successes in solar arrays, wind farms, green hydrogen ecosystems, and energy reservoirs, affirming India’s executional excellence on monumental scales.
Joshi’s strategic huddle with La Caisse’s Charles Émond and Sara Buschard zeroed in on enduring climate investments in India. Via X, he revealed deliberations on amplifying solar-wind hybrids, transmission upgrades, and breakthroughs in green hydrogen alongside storage innovations.
With fervor, Joshi championed expanding ‘Partner with India’ to harness the $400 billion 2030 climate funding influx. India’s strategic energy blueprints dovetail perfectly with La Caisse’s playbook, forging pathways to potent, nationwide clean energy acceleration.
Turning to Oman, Joshi engaged Dr. Said Mohammad Ahmed Al Sakri on fortifying renewable partnerships. India’s arid-zone victories in renewables signal prime investment terrain for visionary players.
Dialogues spotlighted co-production of solar modules, electrolyzer tech, and green hydrogen exports, plus funding for hydrogen hubs, holistic energy schemes, and port infrastructures. Harnessing India-Oman CEPA, mutual funds, and ISA, they eyed integration into OSOWOG and planetary green grids.
Joint tender pursuits for solar and wind capacities, coupled with industry innovation boosts, cap a forward-looking agenda. Through these high-stakes Davos interactions, India emerges as an unmissable hub for green energy capital.