India’s solar-panel boom: full throttle today, uncertain tomorrow

The race for green energy is on. India, driven by soaring electricity demand and a push to reduce reliance on China, is rapidly producing solar panels, fuelling a booming yet uncertain market.At the Adani Group’s factory in Mundra, in India’s western state of Gujarat, assembly lines churn out photovoltaic panels around the clock.Up to 10,000 a day come off the line, with most sent straight to Khavda, further north, where the Indian conglomerate is finishing what will be the world’s largest solar park.But Adani Solar’s CEO, Muralee Krishnan, says operations are “actually lagging”.”Our capacity needs to be fully used — we should work 48 hours a day.”The intensity is matched by other major producers in the world’s most populous nation.At the Tata conglomerate factory in Tirunelveli, in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, 4,000 mostly women employees also work non-stop shifts.”They operate 24/7, so you get better yield, better efficiency, better productivity,” said Praveer Sinha, CEO of Tata Power.”You cannot stop the production line… there is a rush to produce to maximise the output.”With the twin imperatives of development and lower carbon emissions, India has set itself ambitious renewable energy targets.Last year, it said half its electricity-generation capacity was now “green”, five years ahead of the timeline set in the Paris Agreement on lowering emissions.But 75 percent of electricity is still generated by coal-fired power plants, with inflexible operations and long-term coal power purchase agreements hampering renewable uptake.- ‘Make in India’ -There are signs of change.Last year, coal-fired power generation fell three percent, only the second full-year drop recorded in half a decade, according to the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air.Renewable capacity of 230 gigawatts (GW) is set to rise to 500 GW by 2030, including 280 GW of solar.But Prime Minister Narendra Modi has placed another constraint on the industry: “Make in India.”That means there is no question of importing solar panels from China, which supplies 90 percent of the world’s market.All public tenders require “local” production, which India supports with substantial subsidies that have attracted big businesses.Tata, a pioneer in solar panels since the 1990s, has been joined by Adani and Reliance, which have built state-of-the-art, highly automated factories.”The quality of the product is very, very critical,” said Ashish Khanna, CEO Adani Green Energy.”When you are building a project of this size, you also need to be very reassured of the supply chain. We cannot have a disruption or interruption in that particular process.” But for now, the technology and raw materials still come from China.And Beijing has complained to the World Trade Organization over the subsidies and restrictions on its solar panels.The solar push is so intense that Adani is considering silicon mining to secure a key raw material, company insiders say, and there are suggestions Tata Power is eyeing in-house silicon-wafer production.- ‘A huge market’ -Growth in the sector is already staggering, with solar manufacturing capacity expected to soon exceed 125 GW, according to consultancy Wood Mackenzie said.But that is triple current domestic demand, according to Wood Mackenzie analyst Yana Hryshko.Government incentives have “been highly effective in spurring factory announcements, but the industry is now seeing warning signs of rapid overcapacity”, Hryshko said in a report last year.The sector’s long-term sustainability may therefore depend on exports, with some companies already targeting global markets.”Solar is a huge market: the world will see it doubling, from 2,000 GW to 4,000 GW in four years,” said Ashish Khanna, head of the International Solar Alliance. “The question is now — will Indian manufacturers be globally competitive compared to China?” Tejpreet Chopra, from the private power company Bharat Light and Power, points out that “the problem is that it’s cheaper to import from China than to buy local”.And the level of manufacturing in China “is so much higher that it’s very difficult to match”, he added.The sector also faces “geopolitical” headwinds from US President Donald Trump’s tariffs, with Chopra adding that they make it “very difficult to sell to the United States”.Despite these challenges, the head of Tata Power, which does not yet export, remains convinced his business has a bright future.”We strongly believe,” said Praveer Sinha, “that solar will play a very important role in the renewable space of India.”

Saudi Arabia’s UAE ‘mudslinging’ threatens new Gulf crisisSun, 25 Jan 2026 02:01:07 GMT

A Saudi Arabian media campaign targeting the UAE has deepened the Gulf’s worst row in years, stoking fears of a damaging fall-out in the financial heart of the Middle East.Fiery accusations of rights abuses and betrayal have circulated for weeks in state-run and social media after a brief conflict in Yemen, where Saudi air strikes …

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US Fed set to keep rates steady as officials defend independence

The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to keep interest rates unchanged when it meets in the coming week, holding firm despite President Donald Trump’s pressure to slash levels as it guards against threats to its independence.The central bank has cut rates three consecutive times since September as the jobs market weakened, bringing them to a range between 3.50 percent and 3.75 percent.But Fed Chair Jerome Powell has signaled the bar would be higher for a further reduction in January. They meet on Tuesday and Wednesday.”The fact that growth is strong, unemployment is low, equity markets are close to all-time highs and inflation is above target all argue for a pause,” said analysts at ING bank.Powell’s robust defense of Fed independence in response to ongoing pressure from Trump to lower rates confirms this, ING added.On January 11, Powell released a rare, solemn statement revealing that the Department of Justice was investigating him over a $2.5 billion renovation of the bank’s headquarters.He slammed the threat of criminal charges as the result of policymakers setting rates in the public’s best interests — rather than bowing to the president’s wishes.Trump has made no secret of his disdain for Powell, claiming there is “no inflation” and repeatedly questioning the Fed chair’s competence and integrity.Yet, US inflation has been well above the bank’s two-percent target for over five years, said former Cleveland Fed president Loretta Mester.”I think the Fed needs to keep a pretty tight eye on where the inflation is going,” she told AFP.Price increases could cool after Trump’s trade tariffs filter through the world’s biggest economy, but Mester flagged the need for “more convincing evidence.”Meanwhile, existing cost hikes have brought about a “large wedge” between how affluent and lower-income households view the economy, said KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk.Even if the gap could temporarily narrow as fiscal stimulus hits in early 2026 — with a rise in tax refunds incoming due to tax cut expansions — this could “cause a more entrenched bout of inflation,” she warned.Another complication is stagnating employment, forcing policymakers to walk a tightrope between lowering rates to boost the economy and keeping them higher to curb inflation.- External pressure -The Fed meets eight times a year to consider interest rate levels, and Michael Pearce of Oxford Economics said the dilemma it faces has eased.Figures suggest that risks to the labor market appear less pressing than a few months ago, while the likelihood of rising inflation also seems to have moderated, he said in a note.Nonetheless, events outside of the rate-setting committee “have the potential to shake up the path of monetary policy,” Pearce added.Besides the probe into Powell, Trump has sought to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook, sparking a legal battle crucial to shaping how much discretion the president has in changing the Fed’s leadership.A president can only fire Fed board members “for cause,” traditionally understood to mean malfeasance or dereliction of duty.But the Trump administration appears to be pushing a broader interpretation, as Trump moved to fire Cook over mortgage fraud allegations she denies.The Supreme Court heard arguments on the issue on Wednesday, and Cook stressed in a statement afterwards the importance of insulating the Fed from political threats.She said her case is about whether the Fed will set rates “guided by evidence and independent judgment or will succumb to political pressure.”Pearce flagged a “small risk” that the government succeeds in ousting Cook, saying this could “pave the way for a substantial dovish transformation on the committee over time.”Policymakers seen as “hawkish” favor higher rates to fight inflation, while a “dovish” Fed tends towards lower levels.Analysts expect Powell to avoid discussing political issues at his press briefing after the two-day Fed meeting on Wednesday, while divisions remain over the path of future policy.

Un second Américain tué à Minneapolis par des agents fédéraux

Un Américain de 37 ans a été tué samedi par des agents fédéraux à Minneapolis, ont annoncé les autorités de cette ville du nord des Etats-Unis, secouée depuis plusieurs semaines par des manifestations contre la présence de la police de l’immigration (ICE).Sa mort intervient près de trois semaines après celle de Renee Good, une Américaine …

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Une tempête hivernale majeure déferle sur les Etats-Unis

L’état d’urgence a été déclaré sur une bonne partie des Etats-Unis avec l’arrivée d’une importante tempête hivernale qui frappe le Texas et le Nouveau-Mexique, au sud, samedi, avant son déferlement attendu vers le nord-est du pays jusqu’à lundi.La tempête, qualifiée d’”inhabituellement étendue et de longue durée” par les services météo nationaux (NWS), est provoquée par …

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Massive winter storm sweeps across US bringing ice, frigid temps

A massive winter storm on Saturday dumped snow and freezing rain on New Mexico and Texas as it swept across the United States towards the northeast, threatening tens of millions of Americans with blackouts, transportation chaos and bone-chilling cold.Shoppers stripped supermarket shelves as the National Weather Service (NWS) forecast huge snowfall in some areas and possibly “catastrophic” ice accumulations.Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned that up to 240 million Americans could be affected by the storm. At least 16 states and the US capital Washington have declared states of emergency.”Take this storm seriously, folks,” the NWS said on X, predicting an “astonishingly long swath” of snowfall from New Mexico to Maine.More than 3,900 flights in and out of the United States were canceled on Saturday alone, and more than 3,000 others were delayed, according to tracker FlightAware.In Dallas, which has typically mild temperatures in January, freezing rain pelted the Texas city and the mercury plummeted to 21F (-6C).Houston Mayor John Whitmire meanwhile urged residents of the country’s fourth most populous city to hunker down by late Saturday : “Be where you need to be for the next 72 hours.”Eric Maple, a 56-year-old homeless man, was waiting Sunday for a warming center to open in Houston.”We’re not used to what’s supposed to be coming,” he told AFP.”It disrupts things in Houston, but our city’s strong and we’ve got good people here, so we all try to pull together.”State officials vowed that the Texas power grid was in better shape than five years ago, when it failed during a deadly winter storm and left millions without power.Nearly 130,000 US customers were without power as of Saturday afternoon, according to tracking site poweroutage.us, with over 50,000 reported in both Texas and neighboring Louisiana.Snow also hit Oklahoma and Arkansas, where some spots already recorded six inches (15 centimeters) on the ground, the NWS said.After battering the country’s southwest and central areas, the storm system was expected to hit the heavily populated mid-Atlantic and northeastern states before a frigid air mass settles in.”The snow/sleet impacts will linger well into next week with rounds of re-freezing that keeps surfaces icy and dangerous to both drive and walk on for the foreseeable future,” the weather service said. The US federal government preemptively announced offices in Washington would be closed on Monday.”We will continue to monitor, and stay in touch with all States in the path of this storm. Stay Safe, and Stay Warm!” US President Donald Trump, who was riding out the storm at the White House, said on his Truth Social platform. – Polar vortex -The brutal storm system is the result of a stretched polar vortex, an Arctic region of cold, low-pressure air that normally forms a relatively compact, circular system but sometimes morphs into a more oval shape, sending cold air spilling across North America.Scientists say the increasing frequency of such disruptions of the polar vortex may be linked to climate change, though the debate is not settled and natural variability plays a role.But Trump — who scoffs at climate change science and has rolled back green energy policies — questioned how the cold front fit into broader climate shifts.”WHATEVER HAPPENED TO GLOBAL WARMING???” the Republican leader posted on Truth Social.The NWS warned that heavy ice could cause “long-duration power outages, extensive tree damage, and extremely dangerous or impassable travel conditions,” including in many states less accustomed to intense winter weather.- ‘Five or six minutes’ -New York Governor Kathy Hochul warned residents to stay inside amid frigid conditions: “Five or six minutes outside could literally be dangerous for your health.”She stressed precautions like protecting pipes, using heaters safely, and checking on vulnerable neighbors.Authorities warned of life-threatening cold that could last a week post-storm, especially in the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest, where wind chill lows were forecast to dip to extremes under -50F (-45C).Such temperatures can cause frostbite within minutes. 

Une tempête hivernale majeure déferle sur les Etats-Unis

L’état d’urgence a été déclaré sur une bonne partie des Etats-Unis avec l’arrivée d’une importante tempête hivernale qui frappe le Texas et le Nouveau-Mexique, au sud, samedi, avant son déferlement attendu vers le nord-est du pays jusqu’à lundi.La tempête, qualifiée d'”inhabituellement étendue et de longue durée” par les services météo nationaux (NWS), est provoquée par l’arrivée d’une masse d’air arctique en provenance du Canada. Elle apportera des chutes de neige abondantes pour le reste du week-end, tandis que d’importantes accumulations de glace sont prévues des plaines du sud jusqu’au littoral atlantique, avec de potentielles conséquences “catastrophiques à l’échelle locale”, selon le NWS.Ville du sud plus habituée aux températures clémentes, Dallas a vu le thermomètre chuter à -6°C samedi et se prépare à être frappée dans la journée par un mélange de pluie verglaçante et de grésil.”Les conditions se sont rapidement détériorées au cours de la nuit à travers le nord du Texas”, a indiqué l’antenne locale du NWS sur X, qui a dit s’attendre à un “impact considérable sur les transports” dans la région.Autre grande métropole texane, Houston se prépare également à être touchée.”Il va y avoir une tempête violente comme peu d’habitants de Houston en ont connu”, avait averti vendredi le maire John Whitmire.- Coupures -“Tout le monde est le bienvenu dans nos abris. Nous ne demanderons à personne ses papiers”, a ajouté l’édile démocrate lors d’une conférence de presse, en référence aux opérations musclées de la police de l’immigration à travers le pays.Des centres d’accueil, notamment pour les sans-abris, ont ouvert samedi après-midi dans cette ville de près de 2,4 millions d’habitants.”La nuit dernière, je suis resté dans mon campement sous la pluie, et il ne faisait même pas vraiment froid. Mais je sais que ce soir, cela me tuerait probablement”, a déclaré à l’AFP Caroll Eaton, un sans-abri de 71 ans rencontré à Houston. Alors que le réseau électrique du Texas avait connu une panne générale lors de la dernière grande tempête hivernale en 2021, les autorités se sont montrées rassurantes sur sa solidité cette fois-ci.Selon le site poweroutage.us, environ 51.000 foyers et commerces du Texas étaient sans électricité samedi à 23H00 GMT, tandis que 50.000 autres ont été recensés dans l’Etat voisin de Louisiane.Donald Trump a déclaré samedi avoir approuvé des déclarations d’urgence pour 12 Etats du sud et de la côte est, ce qui permettra le déploiement plus rapide des moyens de la Fema, l’agence américaine de gestion des catastrophes naturelles.”Restez en sécurité et restez au chaud!”, a de nouveau exhorté le président américain sur sa plateforme Truth Social.- Vortex polaire -Le ministre des Transports, Sean Duffy, avait déclaré la veille que les préparatifs étaient en cours “pour la tempête hivernale potentiellement historique qui pourrait toucher plus de 240 millions de personnes à travers plus de 40 Etats”.Près de 4.000 vols partant ou à destination des Etats-Unis ont été annulés samedi, selon le site spécialisé FlightAware, qui compte déjà près de 9.000 annulations pour dimanche.Vendredi, Donald Trump avait anticipé l’arrivée de la tempête pour exprimer de nouveau son scepticisme sur Truth Social au sujet de l’existence du changement climatique: “Est-ce que les insurgés environnementaux pourraient m’expliquer s’il vous plaît: QU’EST CE QUI EST ARRIVE AU RECHAUFFEMENT CLIMATIQUE?” Le rapport entre le changement climatique et les tempêtes hivernales de ce type, quand l’air arctique d’ordinaire confiné au pôle Nord s’échappe vers le continent nord-américain, fait l’objet de débats au sein de la communauté scientifique.Les chercheurs relèvent que les perturbations du vortex polaire, qui envoient ces masses d’air arctique vers les Etats-Unis, deviennent plus fréquentes depuis vingt ans. Cela pourrait être dû au réchauffement relativement rapide de l’Arctique, qui affaiblit la ceinture de vents isolant habituellement l’atmosphère au-dessus de cette zone polaire de l’Amérique du Nord. Mais les scientifiques attendent d’avoir davantage de données, sur une plus longue période, pour établir fermement un lien entre ces tempêtes hivernales extrêmes et le dérèglement climatique.