Dr. Jitendra Singh Highlights Udhampur's Solar Rise Under PM Surya Ghar
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Context
In his post on X, Dr. Singh wrote: 'Udhampur shines in clean energy adoption! Ranked 2nd in Jammu Division under PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana, the district has installed 1,132 rooftop solar systems, with 3,484 applications registered so far. A strong step towards sustainable growth and energy self-reliance.' The minister, who represents the Udhampur parliamentary constituency in Jammu and Kashmir, has consistently spotlighted the region's progress on energy and development metrics.
Udhampur, a district in the hilly terrain of the Jammu division, has historically relied on centralised hydro and thermal power sources. The shift toward distributed rooftop solar marks a structural change in the district's energy profile.
Policy Backdrop
PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana was announced in the Union Budget 2024-25 with a total outlay of Rs 75,021 crore. The scheme targets the installation of rooftop solar systems in one crore households across India, offering beneficiaries up to 300 units of free electricity per month alongside capital subsidies for residential installations.
The scheme builds on India's long arc of solar policy, which began with the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission in 2010, designed to scale grid-connected solar power and promote distributed generation. The current programme represents the most ambitious household-level push yet, with district-level rankings used as a competitive tool to accelerate adoption.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries are residential households in Udhampur who gain reduced electricity bills and insulation from grid disruptions common in hilly terrain. The renewable energy sector — from solar panel manufacturers to local installers — also stands to benefit from the sustained pipeline of demand that scheme registrations represent.
For Jammu and Kashmir, a Union Territory that has seen significant central investment in infrastructure since 2019, the solar push aligns with broader goals of economic self-reliance and reduced dependence on centralised power supply, particularly in remote or difficult-to-grid areas.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to whether Udhampur can convert its large pool of 3,484 registered applications into completed installations, closing the gap between intent and execution. The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy periodically releases updated national and divisional rankings, which will indicate whether the district can climb further in the Jammu Division standings.
India's broader target of 500 GW of non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030 and net-zero emissions by 2070 means that district-level momentum in regions like Udhampur is not merely symbolic — it feeds directly into national renewable energy accounting and the country's climate commitments on the global stage.