Nagaland State
Critical minerals, policy, and the energy transition
The Energy Transition in Nagaland, India
Nagaland, a rugged, forested hill state on the Myanmar frontier, is overhauling its diesel-reliant grid with valley-solar clusters and river-driven hydro stations. Installed capacity hovers near 200 MW, led by the 75 MW Doyang hydro project, 22 MW of rooftop and ground solar in Dimapur and Kohima, and scattered diesel sets that fill frequent gaps. Peak demand already brushes 230 MW during winter cold spells. The draft Nagaland Renewable Energy Roadmap 2025 sets targets of 400 MW solar, 120 MW small hydro and 150 MWh batteries by 2030. A 120 MW solar park at Niuland is at land-handover stage, while floating arrays planned for the Doyang and Dikhu reservoirs will add 60 MW. More than 40,000 rural rooftops and solar street-lighting kits are being rolled out, and a 50 MWh battery hub outside Dimapur will ride through monsoon cloud cover and evening peaks. Nagaland’s ophiolite belts in Wokha, Kiphire and Tuensang contain chromite, nickel, cobalt and platinum-group traces, while Changpang hosts remnant oil and associated gas for flexible peaking generation. Limestone and minor coal seams in Mokokchung support low-carbon cement trials. By combining hillside solar, cascade hydro, grid-scale storage and this emerging critical-mineral basket, Nagaland is positioning itself as a resilient 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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