惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

G
GRAHAM CLULEY
V
V2EX
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
博客园 - Franky
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
博客园 - 司徒正美
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
博客园 - 【当耐特】
V
Visual Studio Blog
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
Jina AI
Jina AI
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
腾讯CDC
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
J
Java Code Geeks
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
小众软件
小众软件
A
Arctic Wolf
量子位
博客园 - 聂微东
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
雷峰网
雷峰网
博客园_首页
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
罗磊的独立博客
H
Hacker News: Front Page
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
月光博客
月光博客
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
IT之家
IT之家
The Cloudflare Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
博客园 - 叶小钗
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell

Forbes - Innovation

Why Do Humans Have Fingerprints? Hint: It’s Not What You Think Booking.com Confirms Data Breach, Reservation PIN Codes Changed Why Major News Sites Are Blocking The Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine iPhone Fold Release Date: New Report Details Frustrating Apple News Comet Tracker: How To See Pan-STARRS And Three Planets On Wednesday NYT Mini Crossword Today: Tuesday, April 14 Hints And Answers Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Spangram, Answers: Tuesday, April 14 (It’s A Little Unclear) Today’s Wordle #1760 Hints And Answer For Tuesday, April 14 Most Of The Microplastics In Urban Air Come From Tires Today’s Wordle #1759 Hints And Answer For Monday, April 13 NYT Mini Crossword Today: Monday, April 13 Hints And Answers NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Monday, April 13 The YC Chief Who Codes 10,000 Lines A Day Has A Simple Secret Samsung Expands One UI 8.5 Beta To More Galaxy Owners Why You Should Stop Using Your iPhone If It’s On This List Chamath Says Firms That Treat AI As A Strategy Hand Rivals Their Edge 3 Unexpected Habits Of Secure Couples, By A Psychologist The First Lamp That Folds Your Clothes Samsung’s Disappointing Price Update For Galaxy Phone Buyers 3 Subtle Signs Someone Is Falling In Love With You, By A Psychologist Do Mantis Shrimp See More Colors Than Humans? A Biologist Explains NYT Connections Answers Explained For Monday, April 13 (#1,037) NYT Connections Hints Today: Monday, April 13 Clues And Answers (#1,037) LEGO Luigi & Mach 8 (72050) Review: 2026’s Best Set Yet? Marc Andreessen Says AI Productivity Will Trigger A Hiring Boom 3D Printing Is The Ultimate Hack To Reduce Household Spending Apple iPhone Fold: Striking Design Revealed In Leaked Photos Apple Smart Glasses: New Leak Reveals A Major Design Twist To Beat Meta Tested: The AI Coming To The Rivian R2 Quordle Hints Today: Monday, April 13 Clues And Answers Companies And H-1B Employees Endure Immigration Waits At Consulates 3 Easy Ways To Turn Anxiety Into Sustained Focus, By A Psychologist Here’s The Most Affordable Humanoid Robot You Can Buy Now UFC 327 Results: 5 Biggest Takeaways From A Wild Night In Miami UFC 327 Results, Bonus Winners, Highlights And Reactions Dana White Announces Huge New Fight For UFC White House Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Spangram, Answers: Sunday, April 12 (Get Ready) Tesla ‘Model 2’ Rises From The Ashes Today’s Wordle #1758 Hints And Answer For Sunday, April 12 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Sunday, April 12 Tyson Fury Vs. Arslanbek Mahkmudov Results: Highlights and Reaction NYT Mini Crossword Today: Sunday, April 12 Hints And Answers How Shadow AI Culture Is Destroying Your Business Venture Capital Funds That Market Like Startups Win More Deals Conor Benn Vs. Regis Prograis Results: Highlights and Reaction Samsung’s Disappointing Price Update For Galaxy Phone Buyers Artemis Reached The Moon. The Grid Can Reach The 21st Century A Biologist Explains How Archerfish Shoot Down Prey. Hint: Their Aim Rivals Human Throwing Is It Time For Apple To Forget About The MacBook Air NYT Connections Hints Today: Sunday, April 12 Clues And Answers (#1036) Trump’s 2027 Budget To Reshape U.S. Environmental And Energy Policy CDC Delays Reporting Of COVID-19 Vaccine Benefits—Here’s What To Know Oura Has Designed A Solution To A Big Smart Ring Problem Netflix’s Best New Show Has A Near-Perfect 95% Rotten Tomatoes Score Coachella 2026 Is Being Taken Over By Creator Streams Quordle Hints Today: Sunday, April 12 Clues And Answers This Startup Wants To Use AI To Help Digitize History How To Get The Best Shield In ‘Crimson Desert’ Microsoft Venom Attack Targets C-Suite Executives ‘Maul: Shadow Lord’ Sets Even More Star Wars Rotten Tomatoes Records 3 Ways Happy Couples Argue Differently, By A Psychologist Success For Leapmotor Might Have Negatives For Stellantis New Names Surface As Potential Rogue And Wonder Woman In The MCU And DCU 4 Reasons Artemis Mission Matters Even If You Think It Is Wasteful Fast ‘Crimson Desert’ Patch Adds New Moves, Shield Hiding And One Great Feature Why Do Humans Blush? An Evolutionary Biologist Explains The Signal We Can’t Control Apple iPhone Fold: Striking Design Revealed In Leaked Photos Adobe Attacks Underway—Windows And Mac Users Given 72 Hours To Update iOS 26.4.1 Release: Crucial iPhone Feature Update Arrives, But No Security Fix Fury vs. Makhmudov Full Card, Ring Walk Times and How to Watch Can’t Stand Liquid Glass? This New Hidden iPhone Setting Is A Game-Changer Test-Driving The 2026 Changan Deepal S05: Italian Style Made In China NSA Warning—Reboot Your Internet Router Now Ways That Human-AI Collaboration Slides People Into ‘AI Brain Fry’ And Cognitive Downturns Stop Using These Networks—Google, NSA And TSA Warn NASA Changes Moon Plan: Landing Now Depends On SpaceX Or Blue Origin Samsung Expands One UI 8.5 Beta To More Galaxy Owners The Evolution Of Programmable Hardware At Xilinx NYT Mini Today: Saturday, April 11 Hints And Answers Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Spangram, Answers: Saturday, April 11 (You’re Putting Me On) Splashdown! NASA’s Artemis II Returns To Earth After Moon Mission Attention Is All You Need. The Human Kind Is Still The One That Counts Today’s Wordle #1757 Hints And Answer For Saturday, April 11 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Saturday, April 11 Android Circuit: Galaxy S27 Pro Emerges, Honor 600 Pre-Order Offers, Pixel 11 Display Leaks Apple Loop: iPhone 18 Pro Leak, Urgent iOS Update, MacBook Neo Issues Morgan Stanley Has Mostly Positive Outlook On Tesla Robotaxi, FSD V15 Running Out Of AI Tokens Faster Than Ever? Here’s Why CoreWeave Shares Pop 13% After Anthropic Deal ‘Euphoria’ Season 3’s Rotten Tomatoes Score Crashes, Has Lost Key Player People Don’t Agree On What AI Can Do, But They Don’t Even Use The Same Product ‘Overwhelming’—Google Issues Gemini Update For Gmail Users NYT Connections Hints Today: Saturday, April 11 Clues And Answers (#1035) Quordle Hints Today: Saturday, April 11 Clues And Answers The Costly Dream Of Space-Based AI Infrastructure Can You See The Watcher In This ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Shot? Adobe Attacks Underway—Windows And Mac Users Given 72 Hours To Update You Just Watched The Backdoor Pilot For ‘The Pitt: Night Shift’ Are Nicotine Pouches Like Zyn And VELO Safe To Use? A Doctor Answers Human Resources (HR) Is The Key To AI Success Per WalkMe ( SAP)
India Is Building The Electric Economy Without The Fossil Detour
Ingmar Rentz · 2026-05-15 · via Forbes - Innovation
Moonrise over south central Mumbai - the financial capital of India - showing a glittering metropolis

Moonrise over south central Mumbai - the financial capital of India.

getty

For more than a century, the world has told itself a simple story about how nations become rich: first they burn wood and biomass, then coal, then oil and gas, and only much later, after the factories are built, the cities are crowded, the skies are polluted and the economy is locked into fossil infrastructure, do they begin the long and expensive process of cleaning it all up.

That was the Western path. It was also China’s path, compressed into one of the most extraordinary industrial transformations in history.

But a new analysis from Ember, written by Kingsmill Bond and Sumant Sinha, suggests that India may be showing the world something different: a route to modernity that does not first require a deep fossil fuel dependency, and that may therefore rewrite one of the oldest assumptions in economic development.

Kingsmill Bond is an energy strategist focused on the global transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy. He previously worked at the Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) and Carbon Tracker, and is now part of Ember, where he leads analysis on the “electrotech revolution” and the rapid rise of clean energy technologies. Before entering climate and energy, he spent more than two decades as a financial market strategist at firms including Deutsche Bank and Citibank.

Photothek via Getty Images

India is taking a better path to the electrotech future without the fossil fuel detour.

This is not just another story about solar panels. It is a story about whether the old economic ladder is breaking.

Because if India can industrialize by moving more directly into electricity, powered increasingly by solar, batteries and modern electric technologies, then emerging economies may no longer have to choose between poverty and pollution, or between development now and cleanup later.

MORE FOR YOU

The old doctrine was: burn first, clean up later.

The new doctrine may be: electrify early, avoid the detour.

The Electrotech Graph Every Investor Should See

The most important image in Ember’s report is not a standard chart of renewable energy growth. It is a map of energy history, showing how the West and China moved from bioenergy into fossil fuels before eventually bending back toward electricity, a long and costly route Ember calls “the fossil detour.” India’s path appears different, bending more directly toward electricity through what Ember calls the “electrotech fast-track.”

Source: IEA, IIASA, Ember analysis

Graph credit: Ember-Energy.org (CC-BY-4.0)

That phrase matters because “clean energy” can sound like a narrow policy category, while “electrotech” better captures what is actually happening: solar, batteries, electric vehicles, heat pumps, grids, power electronics, electrolysers, software and the electrification of everything that can be electrified. As Forbes contributor María Mendiluce has argued, the electric era has already begun, with electrification becoming the practical route away from combustion.

This is not merely a change in how electricity is generated. It is a change in what the economy is made of. The fossil economy was built on extraction and combustion, where fuels are dug up, shipped, burned and mostly wasted as heat; the electric economy is built on manufacturing, software, grids, devices and efficiency, where technologies improve, scale and connect.

That difference is now reshaping the global economy faster than many political leaders and investors still understand.

India is not following China’s coal curve

The standard comparison says China is far ahead of India on clean energy, and in absolute terms that is true, because China is the world’s clean technology giant, dominating solar manufacturing, batteries, electric vehicles and much of the supply chain behind the new energy economy.

But Ember asks a better question: what was China doing when it was at India’s current level of development?

The answer changes the entire picture.

At equivalent levels of GDP per capita, India is generating more solar electricity, using far less coal and electrifying transport faster than China did. Ember finds that solar accounted for about 9% of India’s electricity generation in 2025, up from around half a percent a decade earlier, while China, at a similar income level in 2012, had negligible solar generation.

India reached a 5% solar share in electricity generation at around $9,000 GDP per capita. China reached the same milestone at around $23,000. At roughly the same GDP per capita level where China generated only about 37 kilowatt-hours of solar and wind electricity per person, India is already around 205 kilowatt-hours per person, about 5.5 times higher.

That is not a marginal difference. It means solar entered India’s development story much earlier.

This does not mean India has solved the energy transition. It has not. Coal remains central to India’s power system, electricity demand will grow enormously, and the country still faces hard execution problems: grid bottlenecks, storage deployment, land acquisition, permitting, coal-dependent regions, distribution company finances and supply-chain dependencies that will not disappear simply because solar is cheap.

But the direction is different.

China industrialized when coal was cheap and solar was expensive. Ember notes that when China crossed 1,500 kilowatt-hours of electricity use per person in 2004, coal generation was about ten times cheaper than early solar photovoltaics, and over the following decade coal supplied nearly 70% of the growth in China’s electricity generation.

India is reaching a similar stage in a different world.

According to Ember, solar-plus-storage in India now costs around half as much as new coal plants, and that gap is widening as solar and battery costs continue falling while coal plants face declining utilization.

That is the hinge of history: China did not build on coal because coal was sacred, but because, at that moment, coal was cheap, scalable and available; India is industrializing at a moment when the economics have changed.

The money is already moving

This is why India’s story must be understood as part of a much larger shift, because the fossil-free economy is not arriving only because campaigners demanded it, but because the economics of energy have changed.

The International Energy Agency says global energy investment is expected to reach $3.3 trillion in 2025, with around $2.2 trillion going to renewables, nuclear, grids, storage, low-emissions fuels, efficiency and electrification, twice the $1.1 trillion going to oil, gas and coal.

IRENA’s cost data tells the same story from another angle: in 2024, 91% of newly commissioned utility-scale renewable capacity delivered electricity at a lower cost than the cheapest new fossil fuel-based alternative, while solar PV was, on average, 41% cheaper than the lowest-cost fossil alternative and onshore wind 53% cheaper.

The world is still burning fossil fuels at massive scale, and no serious analysis should pretend otherwise, but investors are increasingly building the next system.

These economics are not just reshaping power systems. They are beginning to reshape global diplomacy itself.

Santa Marta was the political signal. India is the economic signal.

This is where India’s electrotech fast-track connects directly to the fossil fuel phaseout talks that began in Santa Marta, Colombia.

In my previous Forbes article, I wrote that the first conference on transitioning away from fossil fuels marked a shift from climate advocacy into the center of the global economy, because countries were no longer only talking about emissions targets, they were finally talking about coal, oil and gas directly.

The closing broadcast from the Santa Marta Conference, as the symbolic handover to the next host nation takes place. Maina Talia, Minister for Home Affairs, Climate Change and Environment of Tuvalu, receives the baton from Stientje van Veldhoven, Environment Minister of the Netherlands; Irene Vélez-Torres, Environment Minister of Colombia; and Catarina Rolfsdotter-Jansson of We Don’t Have Time.

Photo: Wedonthavetime.org

Santa Marta mattered because it broke a taboo.

India matters because it shows why the taboo is breaking now.

Reuters described the Santa Marta talks as a shift from narrowly targeting emissions toward transforming economies to phase out fossil fuels, with 57 countries attending and discussions focusing on national roadmaps, legal and financial obstacles, and the role of a new science panel.

One is the political side of the transition. The other is the economic side.

Santa Marta asks how countries can manage the decline of fossil fuels in a just, orderly and equitable way. India asks an even bigger question: what if some countries can avoid building deep fossil fuel dependency in the first place?

Those two questions now belong together, because one is about leaving the old system, while the other is about not entering it so deeply.

Energy security now means escaping fossil risk

For decades, energy security meant securing access to oil, gas and coal. Countries built strategic reserves, protected shipping routes, made alliances with fossil fuel producers and treated fossil energy as the bloodstream of national power.

That logic is changing.

A country that imports fossil fuels imports volatility. It imports exposure to price shocks, currency pressure, geopolitical conflict and supply disruption, while tying household bills, food prices and industrial competitiveness to fuels it cannot control.

India understands this better than most.

Ember notes that India is the world’s second-largest net oil importer after China, and that roughly half of its oil demand comes from road transport, yet India’s road transport oil demand per person is far lower than China’s was at the same stage of development. Electric cars exceeded 5% of Indian car sales in mid-2025, but the more important early story is happening on two and three wheels: India is the global leader in electric three-wheelers, with electric models approaching 60% of sales, while electric two-wheeler sales have grown rapidly from 2020 levels.

The IEA says electric vehicles are set to displace more than 5 million barrels per day of diesel and gasoline demand globally by 2030, an energy security shift that would have seemed almost impossible only a decade ago.

This is what energy security looks like in the electric age: not controlling more oil, but needing less of it.

India’s advantage is that it is still building

There is a strange advantage in arriving later.

The West built the fossil system before the alternatives were ready. China scaled it faster than anyone before clean technologies had fully matured. Both created enormous wealth, but both also created enormous legacy costs: air pollution, stranded assets, fossil infrastructure, import dependency and political systems shaped around incumbent industries.

India still has a large coal system, but it has not yet built anything like China’s per capita fossil infrastructure.

That creates a window.

Ember says the total cost of solar projects in India already undercuts the marginal cost of running existing coal plants, and estimates that by 2031, more than a third of India’s installed coal capacity could be operating below 40% utilization, weakening its economic case.

That should make every energy investor pause, because a coal plant built today does not compete with yesterday’s solar. It competes with tomorrow’s solar-plus-storage.

And tomorrow keeps getting cheaper.

The development ladder is being rewritten

For decades, the development ladder looked fixed: poor countries used biomass, middle-income countries burned coal and oil, and rich countries electrified, regulated pollution and eventually tried to decarbonize.

That ladder is now being rewritten.

Cheap solar, batteries and electric technologies are compressing the energy transition into the development process itself, which means the clean system is no longer only the destination. It is becoming the route.

That is the historic importance of India’s path.

If India can move more directly from low energy use into electrification, other emerging economies may be able to do the same, not automatically, not without finance, grids, storage, land, minerals, permitting, institutions and industrial strategy, but with an option that did not exist for China in 2004 or the West in the 20th century.

That is the real breakthrough.

The fossil-free economy is not arriving as a distant moral aspiration.

It is arriving as a cheaper machine.

The end of the detour

None of this means India’s transition is guaranteed. Coal could remain stubbornly embedded, grid bottlenecks could slow renewables, storage and flexibility may not scale fast enough, fossil interests will defend the old system, heavy industry could grow faster than clean electricity and policy mistakes could delay progress.

India will need to build one of the largest and most complex electricity systems in human history.

But the direction of travel is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore, not only in India, but in global investment flows, renewable cost curves, electric vehicle adoption and the fact that countries gathered in Santa Marta are now openly discussing how to move beyond coal, oil and gas.

The old world is not gone yet. But the new one is no longer theoretical.

The great story of the 20th century was fossil-powered development. The great question of the 21st century is whether humanity can build prosperity without repeating that damage.

India may become the first major test.

Not because the transition is finished, and not because the country has solved its enormous energy challenges, but because it is large enough, fast enough and early enough in its development journey to change what the world believes is possible.

The West burned its way into the modern age and then spent decades trying to clean up the consequences. China took that same fossil-powered model and scaled it with breathtaking speed. India may now be proving that the next great development story can be different.

That is the real promise of the electrotech fast-track: countries may no longer need to follow the smoke to find prosperity.

They can follow the wire.