Mizoram State
Critical minerals, policy, and the energy transition
The Energy Transition in Mizoram, India
Mizoram, a maze of ridges tucked between Myanmar and Bangladesh, is recasting its diesel-reliant grid around river hydro and high-elevation sunshine. Installed capacity sits near 160 MW, anchored by the 60 MW Tuirial and 36 MW Serlui cascade plus roughly 20 MW of rooftop and community solar, yet peak demand now brushes 170 MW and climbs 6 % a year. The 2017 Solar Policy set an 80 MW goal, but a draft 2025 roadmap scales ambition to 300 MW of solar and 100 MWh of batteries by 2030. Preparatory work is under way on a 100 MW park at Vangchhia, floating arrays on Serlui and Tuirial reservoirs, and 30,000 rural rooftops. A 50 MWh battery hub planned outside Aizawl will ride through monsoon cloud cover, while surveys on the Tuivai River weigh a 600 MWh pumped-storage scheme to shift midday surplus into evening household peaks. Beneath its forest soils, Mizoram hosts modest but useful resources: limestone bands in Champhai and Lunglei for low-carbon cement, thin coal seams and gas seeps in the north-eastern fold belt, and ophiolite bodies near Zawngin that carry chromite, nickel and cobalt traces. By integrating hillside solar, cascade hydro, grid-scale storage and niche mineral resources, Mizoram is forging a self-reliant clean-energy and strategic-materials gateway for India’s far northeast.
A state-by-state analysis of India’s critical minerals and energy transition policies
SFA explores the state-level frontlines of India’s strategy to secure its position in the global energy transition. As demand surges for critical minerals used in electric vehicles, grid storage, solar, and hydrogen technologies, India is intensifying efforts to diversify supply, localise processing, and reduce strategic dependencies. This analysis examines how mineral endowments, state-level industrial policy, and renewable energy deployment intersect across the Indian landscape. From lithium-bearing pegmatites in Karnataka and Jammu & Kashmir to rare-earth-rich coastal sands in Tamil Nadu and Odisha, this state-by-state review highlights the opportunities and constraints shaping India’s clean-energy future and its role in global mineral security.


Meet the Critical Minerals team
Trusted advice from a dedicated team of experts.

Henk de Hoop
Chief Executive Officer

Beresford Clarke
Managing Director: Technical & Research

Jamie Underwood
Principal Consultant

Ismet Soyocak
ESG & Critical Minerals Lead

Rj Coetzee
Senior Market Analyst: Battery Materials and Technologies

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