One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influence

The International Solar Alliance (ISA) is a new initiative launched at the 2015 Paris climate conference by India, jointly with France. The ISA is the first international organization headquartered in India and aims to promote solar electricity in the sunshine belt of states mostly between the tropi...

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Main Authors: Sarang Shidore, Joshua W. Busby
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-11-01
Series:Energy Strategy Reviews
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X19300781
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spelling doaj-f93431de76964b88a936fb2e9378931c2020-11-25T01:41:13ZengElsevierEnergy Strategy Reviews2211-467X2019-11-0126One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influenceSarang Shidore0Joshua W. Busby1University of Texas-Austin, USACorresponding author.; University of Texas-Austin, USAThe International Solar Alliance (ISA) is a new initiative launched at the 2015 Paris climate conference by India, jointly with France. The ISA is the first international organization headquartered in India and aims to promote solar electricity in the sunshine belt of states mostly between the tropic of Cancer and tropic of Capricorn. One of India's key aims in co-founding the ISA is as an instrument for geopolitical influence. However, India has limited capacity to provide financial support for this effort and is not a solar technology innovator or source of low-cost solar products such as panels or inverters (in contrast to far greater Chinese strength in these areas). This raises the question about whether and how India can reap geopolitical rewards from the ISA. This article explores the potential and limits for India to use the ISA as an instrument of geopolitics. We find that India's large domestic market and some of its recent success in scaling-up solar may provide some avenues for exercising leadership in the solar space and that those in turn may yield some opportunities for exercising wider geopolitical influence if those achievements are recognized. We theorize the stages of India's attempted journey from achieving solar leadership to exerting global influence and identify several barriers that must be overcome for success. These include overcoming challenges to its domestic solar program, ensuring institutional strength, and standing out in a crowded global renewables ecosystem of organizations. Keywords: Geopolitics, India, Solarhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X19300781
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarang Shidore
Joshua W. Busby
spellingShingle Sarang Shidore
Joshua W. Busby
One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influence
Energy Strategy Reviews
author_facet Sarang Shidore
Joshua W. Busby
author_sort Sarang Shidore
title One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influence
title_short One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influence
title_full One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influence
title_fullStr One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influence
title_full_unstemmed One more try: The International Solar Alliance and India's search for geopolitical influence
title_sort one more try: the international solar alliance and india's search for geopolitical influence
publisher Elsevier
series Energy Strategy Reviews
issn 2211-467X
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The International Solar Alliance (ISA) is a new initiative launched at the 2015 Paris climate conference by India, jointly with France. The ISA is the first international organization headquartered in India and aims to promote solar electricity in the sunshine belt of states mostly between the tropic of Cancer and tropic of Capricorn. One of India's key aims in co-founding the ISA is as an instrument for geopolitical influence. However, India has limited capacity to provide financial support for this effort and is not a solar technology innovator or source of low-cost solar products such as panels or inverters (in contrast to far greater Chinese strength in these areas). This raises the question about whether and how India can reap geopolitical rewards from the ISA. This article explores the potential and limits for India to use the ISA as an instrument of geopolitics. We find that India's large domestic market and some of its recent success in scaling-up solar may provide some avenues for exercising leadership in the solar space and that those in turn may yield some opportunities for exercising wider geopolitical influence if those achievements are recognized. We theorize the stages of India's attempted journey from achieving solar leadership to exerting global influence and identify several barriers that must be overcome for success. These include overcoming challenges to its domestic solar program, ensuring institutional strength, and standing out in a crowded global renewables ecosystem of organizations. Keywords: Geopolitics, India, Solar
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X19300781
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