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India extends time for solar projects affected by bird conservation

The Indian clean energy ministry granted renewable energy developers an extra month to complete?projects that were delayed by a Supreme Court ruling on?power lines near habitats of?the endangered Great Indian Bustard.

According to an order from the ministry issued on Monday, delays in securing permissions for overhead transmission in bird habitat areas of Rajasthan and Gujarat would qualify as "force majeure", which will allow developers to request extensions to their scheduled commissioning dates.

The Supreme Court's December 2025 verdict ended the long-running legal case and backed the proposal of an expert panel to protect the bird.

The panel suggested tighter restrictions on "new wind and solar large projects" within the "bird habitat zones". The panel also called for the undergrounding of key power distribution lines as well as rerouting corridors with high voltage.

The court had curtailed overhead lines in habitats for bustards earlier, prompting the developers to delay projects as they awaited clearances.

The ministry's Monday order instructed the renewable energy agencies of the country to extend delays from March 21, 2024 until December 19,?2025.

The order does not specify how long the extensions will last.

The risk to developers has been high.

Disconnection

The Indian transmission authority imposed penalties on projects that missed deadlines.

India's goal is to achieve 500 gigawatts in?nonfossil fuel power capacity by 2030. However, the country's transmission system, which stretches over 495,000 circuit kilometers, has lagged behind the growth of generation capacity.

The ministry has also requested that the grid operators and power ministry provide relief for connectivity and transmission fees on affected projects. Sethuraman N.R., Tasim Z.A.D. (Reporting)

(source: Reuters)