Rajasthan State
Critical minerals, policy, and the energy transition
The Energy Transition in Rajasthan, India
Rajasthan, spanning the Thar Desert and Aravalli hills, has become India’s solar epicentre. Installed capacity is about 49 GW, of which renewables exceed 30 GW, ~24 GW solar, 5 GW wind and smaller hydro-biomass plants, already meeting nearly one-third of demand. Landmark assets include the 2,245 MW Bhadla Solar Park and 1,500 MW of new hybrid clusters at Jaisalmer and Fatehgarh. The state’s 2030 roadmap targets 65 GW solar, 10 GW wind–solar hybrids and 4,000 MWh of batteries; recent tenders cover a 250 MW/500 MWh BESS near Jodhpur and a 4,000 MWh VGF-backed portfolio statewide. Agrivoltaic schemes under PM-KUSUM have solarised more than 1,000 MW of irrigation feeders, and a 25 GW green-hydrogen hub anchored at Phalodi will supply refineries and fertiliser plants via new HVDC links to Gujarat and Punjab. Below its desert crust, Rajasthan holds 80% of India’s zinc-lead at Rampura Agucha and Zawar, copper in the Khetri belt, and the country’s largest potash resource in the Nagaur–Ganganagar basin. Tungsten at Degana, phosphate rock near Udaipur and heavy-mineral sands along the Gulf of Kachchh add titanium and rare-earth potential. By coupling gigawatt-scale solar, large-volume storage and this diverse mineral endowment, Rajasthan is shifting from coal importer to flagship clean-energy and critical-materials supplier.
Energy Raw Materials and products produced in Rajasthan
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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