Odisha State
Critical minerals, policy, and the energy transition
The Energy Transition in Odisha, India
Odisha, mineral heartland on India’s Bay of Bengal coast, is retooling its coal-heavy grid for a diversified, low-carbon future. Installed capacity tops 12 GW, about 9 GW coal, 2.3 GW hydro and 0.7 GW renewables, yet summer peaks already reach 8 GW and grow 6 % a year. The Odisha Renewable Energy Policy 2024 targets 10 GW of solar by 2030, including 1.5 GW of rooftop and 1 GW of floating PV on reservoirs such as Hirakud, plus 1 GW of wind–solar hybrids in the coastal plain. Utility projects are advancing: 600 MW solar at Boudh, a 300 MW canal-top scheme on the Mahanadi irrigation network and a 600 MW pumped-storage upgrade at Upper Indravati. An 800 MWh battery hub planned at Angul will shift midday surplus into the evening steel-plant peak, while the Paradip refinery is commissioning a 180 MW electrolyser and Dhamra port is evaluating a 1 GW green-hydrogen unit for low-carbon steel and ammonia. Beneath its lateritic plateau, Odisha hosts the world’s richest chromite at Sukinda, high-grade iron ore in Keonjhar, bauxite on Panchpatmali, manganese in Sundargarh and beach sands near Gopalpur laden with ilmenite, zircon and monazite. Nickel, cobalt and platinum-group traces add further depth. By coupling gigawatt-scale renewables, storage and hydrogen with its rich and strategically vital mineral base, Odisha is charting a path from coal stronghold to integrated clean-energy and materials powerhouse for eastern India.
Energy Raw Materials and products produced in Odisha
Essential Mineral Production and Products in Odisha
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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